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Washington University School of Medicine 

Digital Commons(2)Becker 


The Hatchet 


Washington University Publications 


1918 

The Hatchet^ 1918 


Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/hatchet 


Recommended Citation 

The Hatchet, 1918. Washington University Publications. Bernard Becker Medical Library Archives. Washington University School of 
Medicine, Saint Louis, Missouri. 


This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Washington University Publications at Digital Commons(S)Becker. It has been accepted for 
inclusion in The Hatchet by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons (a)Becker. For more information, please contact engeszer(S)wustl.edu. 






































































































































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cS)<S)<J)<J)(l)66(!)CJ><!)<J) 

HATCHET 

Being the'Year book 
/Washington 

' University 



fifteenth. 

volume 


Publisked by tke Class jf lc>l^ 
Washington University — St-Louis M ? 

tS foymoxiB • L- Herbert- • 







































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By Courtesy Century Magazine. 

THE TOWERS 

From the painting by Jules Guerin 




































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FOREWORD 


Any Foreword in 1917 is 
meaningless, that does not 
put before all else the obli¬ 
gation of the University to 
serve the nation. When the 
nation has been imperilled 
in the past, the universities 
have responded without 
hesitation to the call. They 
have Jed, not followed. 
Whatever may be the ser¬ 
vice called for, now or later, 
Washington University, 
unless she is recreant to her 
trust, must earn the proud 
distinction of making good 
the promise of her name. 



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JoKn Livingston Lowes, Pk. D 

Professor of English 
and one-time Dean of the College, 
in Grateful Appreciation of His Value, 
to the University as an Instructor, 
to the Community as a Man 
and to each of us as a Friend, 

We Respectfully Dedicate this, 
the Fifteenth Volume of 

Tke “Hatcket 





















































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jWemortam 


®HiUiam Curtis? 

Scan Emeritus of tltc Siam ^ritual 
fflay 23. 191C 

ilHarsljaU &. &notu 

professor Emeritus of tijistury 
(Due time Dran of tlie College 
JKnr ttno years Artiuy ChaurcUur 
£flay 2B, 191G 

3jos?cpi) Cl)appd ftapinorti) 

Assistant "Professor of fHathrmatirs 
Nouember 11, 191C 














The Corporation 



President 

Robert Somers Brookings 

First Vice-President 

William Keeney Bixby 

Second Vice-President 

Henry Ware Eliot 


Directors 


Henry Ware Eliot 
Robert Somers Brookings 
Charles Nagel 
George Oliver Carpenter 
Isaac Henry Lionbercer 
Alered Lee Siiapleigii 
Davtd Rowland Francis 


Edward Mallinckrodt 
John Fitzgerald Lee 
William Keeney Bixby 
Robert McKittrick Jones 
Robert Henry Stockton 
August Aniieuser Buscii 
Benjamin Gratz 


Treasurer and Secretary to the Corporation 

Edmund Arthur Engler 





























































































































































































































































































































































































































































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'A columned entry shone’ 


•AWf/ - *’ 1* •>->. - , * ' •(j 


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<•*»»». 























































The University 



Frederic Aldin Hall, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D 


H REDERIC ALDIN HALL, Chancellor of Washington University; A.B., Drury 
College, 1878; A.M., 1881, Litt.D., 1901, Drury College; L.H.D., Tufts College, 
1912; LL.D., Washington University, 1913: Principal, Drury Academy, 1879- 
1892; Goodell Professor of Greek, Drury College, 1892-1901; Dean, Drury College, 
189S-1901 ; Collier Professor of Greek, Washington University, 1901 ; Dean of the 
College, 1912-1913; Acting Chancellor, 1913-1917; Trustee, Drury College; Director 
and Superintendent, St. Louis City Missionary Society, 1900-1910; Member, American 
Philological Association; Member, American Institute of Archaeology; Member, 
Classical Association of the Middle West and South; Author of “Homeric Studies 
for Young Readers,’’ “Outline of the Odyssey,” “Outline of the Orestrian Triology,” 
“Iphigenia in Literature.” 


Page Twenty-seven 




























ttvuh rsMti »* mr i’Vti. » . » 



The U n i V e r 


i t y 


The New Chancellor 

PON the resignation of former Chancellor David F. Hous¬ 
ton it was universally agreed that there was but one man 
to fill the position of Chancellor, and that man was Dr. 
Frederick A. Hall, Acting-Chancellor since 191-5, when Dr. 
Houston was given a leave of absence to fill the post of 
Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson’s Cabinet. 
'1'he former Chancellor’s resignation was interpreted to 
mean that he was to remain in the Cabinet and was accepted by 
the Corporation at a meeting on January 3, 1917. At this meeting Dr. 
Hall was appointed to the position of Chancellor. 

The appointment of Dr. Hall was in no way a surprise. It was felt 
that the former Chancellor would be offered another term in the Cabinet 
and Dr. Hall, as acting Chancellor, was the logical man for the position. 
The action of the Corporation received the immediate approbation of the 
people of St. Louis, and both the student body and faculty of Washing¬ 
ton University. 

Dr. Hall was born at Brunswick, Me., and was educated at Drury 
College, Springfield, Mo. He graduated in 1878, and was at once put 
in charge of Drury Academy. After thirteen years he resigned the 
principalship of the Academy to accept the Godell Professorship of 


Greek in Drury College. In the fall of 1901, Dr. Hall came to Wash 
ington as Professor of Greek. In 1906-07, he went to Athens on a leave 
of absence to study at first hand the language for which he had such a 
fondness. On his return he was appointed Acting Dean of the College, 
and was made Dean in 1911, which position he held until he was made 
Acting Chancellor. 



Page Twenty-eight 































































11 

/^VEORGE OSCAR JAMES, Dean of the College; A.B., Johns Hopkins Uni- 
II VJI Versity ’ 1895 : Fellow ’ 1898 -' 8 "; Ph.D., 1899; Instructor in Physics, University 

11 of Utah < 1896-1897; Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, Lehigh Uni¬ 

versity, 1902-03; Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, Washington University, 

1903-08; Assistant Professor, 1908-; Member, American Mathematical Society; 

Mitgleid der Gesellschaft fiir Positivische Philosophic; Corresponding Secretary of 
the Academy of Science of St. Louis, Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. 


II 


Page Thirty 








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Aits and Sc 


i e n c e s 



Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. 

g LEXANDER SUSS LANGSDORF, Dean of the Schools of Engineering and 
Architecture and Professor of Electrical Engineering; B.S. in M.E., Wash¬ 
ington University, 1898; M.M.E., Cornell University, 1901; Instructor in 
Physics, Washington University, 1898-1900; Assistant Professor of Electrical En¬ 
gineering, 1904 - ; Dean of the Schools of Engineering and Architecture, 1910 - ; 

Member, Electrical Section, International Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Ex¬ 
position, 1904; Fellow, American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member Engineers' 
Club of St. Louis (President, 1912) ; Member, Academy of Science of St. Louis; 
Member, Society for tbc Promotion of Electrical Education (Member of Council) ; 
Fellow, American Association for tbe Advancement of Science; Member, City Plan 
Commission of St. Louis; Author of “Principles of Direct Current Machines;” Hon¬ 
orary Member, Theta Xi; Sigma Xi. 



Page Thirty-one 





















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'Many a night from yonder ivied casement, ere 1 zvcnt to rest 
Did / look on great Orion sloping slowly to the West” 


Page Thirty-tzvo 

























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The Faculty 



TttC FACULTY 


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THE COLLEGE 


Department of Astronomy 

Associate Professor George Oscar James, Ph.D. 


Department of Botany 

Professor George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. 

Professor Benjamin Minge Duggar, Ph.D. 
Associate Professor Jesse More Green man, Ph.D. 
Associate Professor Edward Angus Burt, Pii.D. 
Mr. Joseph Warren Severy, A.B. 

Mr. Harry Milliken Jennison, A.M. 


Department of Chemistry 


Prof. LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Lloyd Francis Xickeli., Pii.D. 
Mr. William Vernon Hoyt, Ph.D. 

Mr. Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. 

Miss Leta Wright, A.B. 

Mr. Frederick Burton Langreck, B.S. 

Mr. John Charles Fremont Walker, B.S. 


Department of Drawing 

Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. 

Mr. Thomas John Cutting 


Department of Economics 

Professor William Franklin Gephart, Pii.D. 
Assistant Professor Isaac Lippincott, Pii.D. 
Mr. John Bertwell Ewing, A.B. 

Department of Education 

Professor Edgar James Swift, Pii.D. 

Mr. Harry Colville Holl, B.D., A.M. 


Page Tliirty-thrce 


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Department of English 


Professor Johx Livingston Lowes, Ph.D. 

Associate Professor William Roy Mackenzie, Ph.D. 

’Assistant Professor Francis Cox Walker, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Garnett Gladwin Sedgewick, Ph.D. 

Acting Assistant Professor Hunley Whatley Herrington, Ph.D. 
Miss Martha Gause McCaulley, Ph.D. 

Miss Ethel Genevieve Sprague, A.B. 

Mr. Clinton Joseph Masseck, A.M. 

Mrs. Wm. Roy Mackenzie, A.B. 

Miss Frances Howe Miller, A.M. 

Miss Claire Agnes Berry, A.B. 

Miss Edith Carrington Jones, A.B. 

Miss Kathrin Marie Baker, A.B. 


Department of French 


Professor Gaston Douay, A.M. 

Associate Professor Winthrop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. 
Mr. John Hart Brown, A.M. 

Mr. John Richardson Miller, A.M. 

♦Mr. Maurice Faure 


Department of Geology 


Professor Walter Edward McCourt, A.M. 
Assistant Professor William Clifford Morse 
Mr. James Terry Duce, A.B. 


Department of German 


Professor Otto Heller, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Philipp Sf.iberth, A.M. 
Mr. ‘Archer Taylor, Ph.D. 

Mr. Erwin Haiitung, A.M. 


Department of Greek 


Professor Frederic Aldin Hall, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D. 
Associate Professor George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Walter Hobart Palmer, Ph.D. 


Department of History 


Professor Roland Greene Usher, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Chauncey Samuel Boucher, Ph.D. 
Mr. Carl Stevenson, Ph.D. 


Department of History of Art 


Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. 

Assistant Professor Lawrence Hill, B.S. 


Page Thirty-four 





















Department of Italian 

Associate Professor Winthrop Hoet Chenf.ry, Ph.D. 
Assistant Professor George Irving Dale, Ph.D. 


Department of Latin 

Professor Frederick William Shipley, Ph.D. 
Associate Professor George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. 
Assistant Professor Walter Hobart Palmer, Ph.D. 


Department of Mathematics 

Professor Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph.D. 
Associate Professor William Henry Roever, Ph.D. 
Assistant Professor Otto Dunkel, Ph.D. 

Mr. Alan Ditchfield Campbell, A.M. 


Department of Mechanics 

Professor Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph D. 
Associate Professor George Oscar James, Pii.D. 


Department of Philosophy 

Associate Professor Charles Edward Cory, S.T.B., Ph.D. 


Department of Physical Training 

Mr. William Philip Edmunds, M.D. 

Miss Florence Grant, A.B. 

Miss Frances Lewis Bishop, M.D. 

Mr. Lindley Charles Milford, B.S. 

Mr. George Spence Fricke 

Mr. Edward Benedict Grogan, B.S. 


Department of Physics 

Professor Emeritus Francis Eugene Nipher, A.M., LL.D. 
Associate Professor Lindley Pyle, A.M. 

Assistant Professor George Wilder Moffitt, Ph.D. 

Mr. Charles Henry Skinner, M.S. 


Department of Political Science 

Assistant Professor William Alexander Robinson, Pii.D. 


Department of Psychology 

Professor Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. 


















Department of Sociology 

Associate Professor Charles Edward Persons. Ph.D. 


Department of Spanish 

Associate Professor Winthrop Holt Chenery. Ph.D. 
Assistant Professor George Irving Dale, Ph.D. 

Department of Zoology 


Professor James Francis Abbott, Ph.D. 
Mr. Frank Blair Hanson, A.M. 

Miss Myrtle M. Baumgartner 


SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING 

Civil Engineering 

Professor John Lane Van Ornum, C.E. 

Assistant Professor Ernest Osgood Sweetser, C.E 
Mr. Charles Elijah Galt, C. E. 

Mechanical Engineering 

Professor Ernest Lin wood Ofile, M.E. 

Assistant Professor Franz Alfred Berger, M.E. 

Mr. William Wallace MacDoweli. 

Mr. Walter Siegerist, B.S. 

Mr. Ralph Jacob Sapper, B.S. 

Electrical Engineering 

Professor Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. 

Assistant Professor Harry Gray Hake, M S., E.K. 

Mr. Albert Shelby Blatter man, B.S. 


Chemical Engineering 


Professor LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor Lloyd Francis Nickell, Ph.D. 
Mr. William Vernor Hoyt, Ph.D. 

Mr. Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. 

Mr. Benjamin Lusby Simpson, B.S. 


SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE 

Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. 

Professor Gabriel Ferrand, A.D.G. (Diplome du Government Francais^ 
Assistant Professor Lawrence Hill, B.S. 

Mr. Thomas John Cutting 

Mr. Austin Elliott Fitch, M. Arch. 


Page Thirty-six 























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Pre^.^clolj' Drey V.P. Helen H oil man p 
Dec. Dorof hu (ugenioL Bremer 1 read (liner 

5. af.yV Ralph Sromnellflill 
Hafchef Repb. Redhleeti [ucij-Splvesfer Waits Smijtb 


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Page Thirty-seven 


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I 


9 


The Class of 1917 


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Leslie Myron Bare, 2.3. 

Electrical Engineering 

Band (2, 3) ; Engineers’ Council (3) ; A.I.E.E. 
(2, 3, 4) ; Vice-Chairman (4). 


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1 


George Wilson Belcher 
Medicine 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Joseph Alexander Bernard 
Arts 


East St. Louis, Ill. 


. IV 


VV1 


FI 


Lucille Adele Bishop, K.A.9., 4.K.B. . St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Secretary, Junior Class; Senior Representative, 
Women’s Council; University Big Sister Move¬ 
ment ; Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; Cabinet (4); W.A.A. 
(2, 3, 4) ; Government Club. 

Sophomore Honors. 

Keod. 


Walter Otto Bode, K.A. ... St. Louis, Mo. 
Civil Engineering. 

Glee Club (3, 4); President (4); Trip (3, 4). 
Collimation Club. 


ra 





Page Forty 





































Katherine Sloan Brookes, K.A.6. . St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Women’s Council (2, 3. 4) ; President (4) ; 
Y.W.C.A. (2, 3, 4) ; Cabinet (4) ; Secretary of 
The Middle Western Inter-Collegiate Association 
for Student Self-Government (4). 

Keod. 


Arthur Charles Brooks . 
Medicine 


St. Louis, Mo. 


w 


Frances A. Brooks 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


May Day Dances (2, 3) ; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3) 
Vice-President, Women’s Union (4). 


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l / 




Rorert Wrav Brooks . 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Glee and Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Vice-Presi¬ 
dent, Mandolin Club (4) ; Governing Board. 
Artus. 

Obelisk. 


Angela Burdeau . 
Architecture 


St. Louis, Mo. 




31 


Page Forty-one 




































































Arts and Sciences 


Irw in Kingsley Cozzens, 2.X. . . St. Louis, Mo. 

Arts 

Freshmen Class Treasurer (1) ; Assistant Finan¬ 
cial Manager, W.U.A.A. (3) ; Pep Patrol (1, 2) : 
Treasurer (2) ; Freshmen Advisor (4) ; Student 
Council Secretary (4) ; Quadrangle Club (1) : 
Thyrsus (3, 4) ; Assistant Business Manager (3) ; 
Treasurer (4) ; Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; 
Assistant Business Manager (1); Governing 
Board (4); President (4); German Club (1); 
Senior Class Play Committee. 

Artus. 

Lock and Chain. 


Helen V. Cuppaidge .... Moberly, Mo. 


Arts 

Student Life (1, 2, 3, 4) : Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4) : 
Cabinet (3, 4) : Secretary, McMillan Hall (1, 2) ; 
W.A.A. (1, 2, 3, 4). 


Mary Agnes Dalton .... St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 


Edna Victoria j>e Liniere ... St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 


Bruce E. Dolch .St. Louis, Mo. 

Mechanical Engineering 

Student Life (4); Chapel Choir (1, 2). 

A.S.M.E. 

A.l.E.E. 



Page Forty-three 












































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Arts and Sciences 




se 


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fr 


Adolf Drey . 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


President Senior Class; Thyrsus (2, 3, 4) ; Treas¬ 
urer (3) ; Annual Play (2, 3, 4) ; President (4) ; 
Founder Eliot Literary Magazine (3, 4) : Business 
Manager (3) ; Associate Editor, Hatchet; Student 
Life (2, 3, 4); Athletic Editor (3); Glee Club 
(2, 3, 4) : Pep Patrol (2, 3, 4) ; Cabinet Member 
(3) ; Vice-President (4) ; Freshman Advisor (3) ; 
Member Committee on W.U. Songs (3) ; Class 
Basket-ball (1, 2, 3): Class Baseball (1, 2); 
Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Washington 
Union. 

Artus. 




Alk'k Louise Ernst, VL 
Arts 


St. Louis,Mo. 


Athletic Association (2, 3) ; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2) • 
May Day Dances (1, 2, 3) ; French Club (2, 3, 4) ; 
Vice-President (4) ; Treasurer (3) ; Ukulele Club 
(3). 


Margaret Ewing, r.4>.B. ... St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 


Arthur August Fatt.man . . St. Louis, Mo. 

Electrical Engineering 

Thyrsus (1. 2, 3): Annual Play (1); Orchestra 
(1,2,3). 

A.I.E.E. 


tv 


Alfred Hirsch Fixkelstein 
Arts 

Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3). 
Artus. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


IP 
11 
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Page Forty-four 


591 






































Arts and Sciences 


g r ts^5nrncc 


Stanley Vetsburg Friedheim, 4>.B.K. 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Ruth Havercal Genoway 
Arts 


Fredcricktown, Mo. 


Arthur Bernhardt Gleditzsch . St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Glee Club (1,2,3,4) ; German Club (3, 4) ; Presi¬ 
dent (4); Choir (1); Treasurer (4). 



Albert E. Goldstein, ‘1\B,K., B.P. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Chemical Engineering 

Orchestra (2); Chemical Engineers’ Club (4). 


Edith L. Hammond, AT. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Arts 

Women’s Athletic Association (2, 3, 4) ; President 
(4) ; May Day Dances (2, 3) ; Hockey Team 
(2, 3, 41; Captain (3, 4); Basket-ball (3, 4); 
Student Life (3, 4) ; Women’s Athletic Editor 
(4) ; Y.W.C.A. (2, 3, 4) ; Cabinet (4) ; French 
Club (2, 3) ; Assistant Photographer, Hatchet; 
Vice-President, McMillan Hall (4). 

Pleiades. 

Keod. 





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and Sciences 


Lee Harrison, Jr., 4>Ae. . . . Belleville, 111. 

Civil Engineering 

Assistant Football Manager (3) ; Manager (4) ; 
Secretary, W.U.A.A. (4) ; Athletic Council (5) ; 
Pep Patrol (4) ; Engineers’ Council (4) ; Asso¬ 
ciate Member Thyrsus (4) ; Collimation Club (3) ; 
Vice-President (4); President (5). 

O. & P. C. 

Obelisk. 

“13.” 

Pralma. 


Charlotte Henselmeier .. . St. Louis, Mo. 

Arts 


Raymond L. Herbert .... St. Louis, Mo. 
Architecture 

Student Council (2) ; Honor Committee; Wash¬ 
ington University Architectural Society. 
Sophomore Honors. 

Scarab. 


Elmer L. Hughes 0.3-. ... St. Louis, Mo. 

Mechanical Engineering 

Cheer Leader (4) ; Class Treasurer (4) • Glee 
Club (3, 4) ; Pep Patrol (2, 3, 4) 

A.I.E.E. 

A.S.M.E. 


Hubert King Jackson ... St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Glee Club (1. 2); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4) • 
Quadrangle Club (1). 

Obelisk. 

Lock and Chain. 


Page Forty-six 


















Alice Johann, K.A.0. 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Thyrsus (2, 3, 4) : Vice-President (3, 4) : Annual 
Play (2, 3, 4) : Student Life (2, 3, 41 : Exchange 
Editor (3) : Associate Editor (4) : Eliot (3, 41 ; 
Associate Editor, Hatchet: Junior Prom. Commit¬ 
tee; Class Secretary (21 : Women’s Athletic Asso¬ 
ciation (1,2, 3, 41 ; Hockey (2, 31. 

Pleiades. 

Keod. 


Margaret Frances Johnson, r.4>.B. . St. Louis, Mo. 


Arts 


YVV.C.A.; Cabinet (2, 3) : Delegate, Estes Park 
Summer Conference (2) ; Women’s Athletic 
Association: French Club (2, 3) ; Government 
Club (1, 2); Consumers’ League (1); Vice- 


President, McMillan Hall (41. 


Russell L. Jolley, 2.X. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Civil Engineering 

Class Football (2) : Class Basket-ball (1, 2, 3. 41 : 
Captain (4) ; Class Treasurer (2) ; Class Athletic 
Manager (3) ; Assistant Football Manager (31 : 
Chairman, Junior Prom. Committee; Member 


Union Board (41. 
Collimation Club. 
Lock and Chain. 
“13.” 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Irene Jane Kavanaugii 
Arts 

McMillan Day (2, 3, 41 ; Hockey Team (2, 31 : 
Y.W.C.A.; Women’s Athletic Association. 


Harold Clark Keysok, B.B.H., 2.S. . Kirkwood, Mo 
Mechanicat Engineering 

A.B., Washington University. 1915: Eningeers’ 


Council (4) ; Class Athletic Manager (41 : 
A.S.M.E. Treasurer (3) : Chairman (4). 


Page Forty-seven 











































St. Louis. Mo. 


Walter Henry Kurtz, A.T.n. . 

Mechanical Engineering 

Freshman Advisor (3, 4) ; Elizabethan Pageant 
(3) ; Y.M.C.A.: Engineers’ Club of St. Louis, 
Prize Membership; Chemical Society; Civics 
Club: Exhibit Committee, University Open House 
Day (1) ; Washington Union; A.S.M.E. (2, 3, 4) ; 
Vice-Chairman (3) ; Secretary (4). 


Dorothy Damon Lamb 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 



II 




St. Louis, Mo. 


Mandolin Club (2) ; Pre-Medics Secretary (1) ; 
President (2) ; Medics Vice-President (4). 


Otto St. Clair Crebs, 'h.B.n. . . Belleville, Ill. 

Medicine 

Student Council (3). 


I Ioroth y Eugenia Kremer, A.r. . Webster Groves. Mo. 
Arts 

Class Hockey Team (2, 4); Y.W.C.A. (2, 3) ; 
Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; May 
Day Festival (1. 2, 3) ; Elizabethan Pageant (3) ; 
Junior Prom. Committee; Thyrsus (3, 4) ; Class 
Secretary' (4) ; Les Causeuses (2, 3). 


Page Forty-eight 























Arts and Sciences 



Francis Raymond Leimkuehler . St. Louis, Mo. 
Architecture 

Chapel Choir (2) ; Class Track (1, 4) ; Glee Club 
(2, 3, 4) ; Trip (4) ; Thyrsus (4) ; Pep Patrol (2, 
3); Architectural Year Book Committee (3, 4); 
W.U.A.S., Vice-President (4). 

Scarab. 


Charles A. Liebf.r .... St. Louis, Mo. 
Electrical Engineering 

Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Secretary (4) ; Governing 
Board of Glee and Mandolin Clubs (3, 4) ; Trip 
(2, 3, 4) ; Stage Manager (3, 4) ; Upper Classmen 
Advisor (3, 4) ; Regent of Upper Classmen Ad¬ 
visors (4) ; President, Engineers’ Council (4) ; 
A.I.E.E., Secretary (3) ; Chairman (4). 

Pralrna. 

Mary Kathleen Lucy, n.B.4>. . . St. Louis, Mo. 

Arts 

Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Wo¬ 
man’s Organization (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Hockey Team 
(2, 3, 4) ; Captain (2) ; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; 
May Day (1. 2, 3, 4); Women’s Council (3); 
Secretary (3); Thyrsus (3, 4) ; Student Life 
(3, 4) ; Society Editor (4) ; Committee on W.U. 
Songs (4) ; Thyrsus Annual Play (4) ; Class 
Hatchet Representative (4). 

Pleiades. 

Keod. 

John Damel Luther .... Clayton, Mo. 
Arts 


Albert C. Maacic 2.X. ... St. Louis, Mo. 

Architecture 

Student Council Honor Committee (3) ; Asso¬ 
ciate Thyrsus (4) Senior Prom. Committee; De¬ 
signer, Shakespearean Pageant Stage ; W.U.A.S.; 
Sou Massier (2). 

Lock and Chain. 

Scarab. 



.jg&iitirnrp 


Page Forty-nine 



























IIBiM 



George John MagiAlo, 0.H. 
Architecture 


Union Board (4) : Student Council (4) ; Art 
Editor, Hatchet (3) ; Thyrsus (4) ; Assistant in 
Drawing (3, 4) ; Y.M.C.A. (1, 2) ; Freshmen 
Advisor (4) ; YV.U.A.S. (1, 2, 3, 4). 

Scarab. 

Pralma. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Agnes Ruth Manley, n.B.*J>. . 

Arts 

Hockey Team (2, 3) : Y. W. C. A.; YV.A.A.; May 


Day (2,3). 


5 


Miriam M. Marten . 
Arts 

W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Helen Holman McCargo, II.B.4'. 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Vice-President Senior Class; Hockey Team 
(2, 3, 4); YV.A.A.; Junior Prom. Committee; 
Quadrangle Club (1) ; May Day (1, 2) ; Y.YV.C.A. 




Frank Ray McFarland. 0,i. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Civil Engineering 
Collimation Club. 




Enge Fifty 






— 




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Robert Harvf.v McRobErts, ‘I’.t).A. 

Arts 

Entered, 1913, from University of Cincinnati 
Class Football (1); Varsity’ Football (2, 3, 4) 


William B. McSorley, Jr., 4’A©. 

M e chant cat E n gineering 

Class Track (1, 2); Class Football (1); Varsity 
Track (2, 3) ; Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; Business Man¬ 
ager (31 ; President of the Combined Clubs (4). 
A.S.M.E. 

Pralma. 

Obelisk. 


Herbert William Meinholt, 


Marian C. Meyersieck, n.M.A. 
Arts 

Y.W.C.A. (4). 


Katherine Middleton, K.A.9. 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo 


Student Life (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Associate Editor (3) ; 
Associate Editor, 1916 Hatchet Board; Hockey 
Team (3, 4) ; Basket-ball Team (3). 

Pleiades. 

Keod. 


Page Fifty-one 



».*.**•. *jdM9Kl&?a9C9» U 






























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John Ray Moll, -.X. 
Architecture 


St. Louis, Mo. 




Class Basket-ball (3, 4); Varsity Basket-ball; 
W.U.A.S. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; 
President (4) ; \ ice-President Athletic Associa¬ 
tion (4). 

Scarab. 




Wendell P. Monroe 


Muskogee, Okla. 


Electrical Engineering 

Student Life Association, Circulation Manager 
(3) ; Assistant Photographer, 1917 Hatchet; 
Y.M.C.A. (1, 2); Civics Club (1, 21. 


I 'i 1 


Gladys C. Morey 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Class Hockey (3, 4) ; W.A.A. (3, 4) ; St. Louis, 
Mo., French Club (3, 4) ; President (4) : 
1.W.C.A.; Elizabethan Pageant; May Day Dances 
(3). 


George Conrad Nagel 
Arts 


Webster Groves, Mo. 


Student Life Association, Assistant Business Man¬ 
ager (2, 3) ; Student Council (3) ; Chapel Choir 
(1, 2, 3, 4 ) ; Manager of Elizabethan Pageant 
Orchestra (3) : University Orchestra (2) ; Uni¬ 
versity Band (2, 3, 4) ; Its First President (2) ; 
Class Fight (1, 2) ; Class Football (2) ; Junior 
Benefit Play (3) ; Business Manager, Eliot Lit¬ 
erary Magazine (4). 


Edward D. Nix, K.-. . 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Associate Editor, 1917 Hatchet: Founder, Eliot 
Literary Magazine (2); Fiction Editor (3); 
Editor-in-Chief (4) ; Freshman Advisor (4) ; 
Class Day (4) ; Washington Union. 


Page Fifty-two 


































Augusta Brey Parker, n.B.d*. 
Arts 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Hockey 
(2) ; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; May Day (1, 2, 3) ; 
Quadrangle Club (1). 


Clara Dell Parks, II.B.'h. ... St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3) : 

Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3) : Hockey Team (2, 3) ; May 
Day (1.2); T.C.P.Z. 


Glenn Phelps 

Architecture 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; Varsity Quartet (3, 4) ; Man¬ 
dolin Club (1); Orchestra (1): Band (2, 3, 4); 
Choir (2, 3, 4) ; lunior Minstrels (3) ; Y.M.C.A.; 
W.U.A.S. 


Mary Lee Pickei., A.r. 
Arts 


Kirkwood, Mo. 


Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; 
Basket-ball (2); Tennis Champion (1); Mav 
Day (1, 2, 3) ; Y.W.C.A. 


Nelson M. Pope . 

Mechanical Engineering 
Glee Club (1, 2, 3. 4) : 
Track (1, 2). 

A.S.M.E. 

Lock and Chain. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Treasurer (4) ; Class 


Page Fifty-three 


Vi 

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Luella Quinn, H.M.A. . 

Arts 

Y.W.C.A. (3): Basket-ball (4) : 


Maplewood, Mo. 
French Club (3). 


Red Bud, 111. 


B. H. Roberts, e.S.Harrison, Ark. 

Electrical Engineering 
Class Football (1). 

A.I.E.E. 


M. 


Arthur B. Raffl, X.Z.X 
Medicine. 


'4 V. 


James Alexander Preston, 'b.A.0, . St. Louis, Mo. 
Arts 

Student Life (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Associate Editor (3) ; 
Editor-in-Chief (4) ; Thyrsus (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Annual 
Play (1); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Associate 
Editor, Hatchet (3) ; Washington Union. 

Artus. 


Humphrey Price, 'M.0 . St. Louis, Mo. 

Civil Engineering 

Student Council (3) ; Class President (3) ; Pep 
Patrol (1, 2, 3) ; Engineers’ Council (4). 
Collimation Club. 

O. & P. C. 


E. 


Page Fifty-foui 




















Arts and Sciences 



St. Louis, Mo 


Melba Ryan, A.r. 

Arts 

Women’s Athletic Asosciation 
Y.W.C.A. (1, 2) ; Hockey Team (2, 3) ; May Day 
(1, 2) ; French Club (3). 

T.C.F.Z. 


3, 4); 


Benedict Henry Schulze, 0.H. 


St. Louis, Mo 



Civil Engineering 

President, Student Body (4) ; Honor Committee 
Chairman (4) ; Student Council (2, 4) ; Editor- 
in-Chief, 1917 Hatchet; Class President (2) ; 
Assistant Financial Manager, W.U.A.A. (3). 
Collimation Club. 

O. & P. C. 

Obelisk. 

Lock and Chain. 

'•13." 

Pralma. 

Mary C. Smith, n.M.A. . 

Arts 

Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2); Chapel 
Choir (2, 3, 4) ; French Club (2); Women’s 
Union. 

S. Watts Smyth, K.A 

Mechanical Engineering 

Glee Club (3, 4) ; Class Football (2) ; Class 
Track (3) ; Class Hatchet Representative (4) , 
Engineering Council (3) ; c '’ 

(3). 

A.S.M.E. 

Obelisk. 


Abraham Jerome Sparks . 



























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Arts and Sciences 



Luke Sells Stites, B.0.n. 


Kirkwood, Mo. 


Civil Engineering 

Class Treasurer (1, 4) ; Varsity Track (4, 5) ; 
Class Track (1, 2, 3) ; Pep Patrol (4, S). 
Collimation Club. 

O. & P. C. 


Edwin Roosevelt Thomas, K.A. 
Arts 


Olivette, Mo. 


Varsity Basket-ball (4) ; Business Manager, 1917 
Hachet; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Mandolin Club 
(1, 2): Class President (1); Class Basket-ball 
(1, 4) : Class Track (1). 

Lock and Chain. 

“13.” 

Pralma. 

Artus. 


Gratia Rosebud Thompson 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Arts 


Y.W.C.A. (1, 2) ; May Day (1, 2). 


Robert Charles Thumser . 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Meclianical Engineering 
Freshman Advisor. 
A.S.M.E. 

Washington Union. 


Edw in Julius Ulbricht, B.P., -.Z. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Chemical Engineering 

Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Engineering Council (3) ; 
Chemical Engineers’ Club (2, 3, 4) ; President 
(4). 




1 


Page Fifty-six 

































Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Secretary (2) ; Ath¬ 
letic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) : Secretary (2) ; 
Basket-ball (2, 3, 4) ; Championship (3) ; Varsity 
(3) ; Hockey (3, 4) ; Shakespearean Pagent (3) : 
Deutscher Verein (2, 3, 4) ; “Der Dummkopf" 
(2); “Ultimo" (3); “Koepnickerstrasse” (4). 


Emma H. Vogt, n.H.<l>„ 4-.B.K. . 

Arts 

Thyrsus (1, 2, 3) ; May Day (1, 2) : Quadrangle 
Club (11; Class Hatchet Representative (1) 
Class Vice-President (2) ; Hockey Team (2) 
Associate Editor, Hatchet (3) ; Pleiades (2, 3, 4) 
Mellerdrammer (2). 


Blanche Walsh 
Arts 


Henry Theodor Wensel . 

Arts 

Deutscher Verein (3, 4); “Ultimo” (3). 


Sophomore Honors. 































Florence J. Brown . 

Arts 

Urban Justus Busier, -,X. 
Medicine 

William Goodman Coleman 
Medicine 

Thomas R. Ferguson 
Arts 

Mildred Maschmejlr 
Arts 

Samuel Pf.setke 
Medicine 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Belleville, Ill. 

St. Louis, Mo. 

St. Louis, Mo. 

St. Louis, Mo. 

St. Louis. Mo. 


■ A. 


Page rifty-eight 


19 


» 





































12:00 m. 

7 :00 p. m. 


10:00 a. m. 
8:15 p. m. 


10:00 a. m. 
11:00 a. m. 
11 :30 a. m. 
12:00 m. 

3:00 p. m. 
7 :00 p. m 


10:00 a. m 
8:30 p. m 


Arts and Sciences 

Program of Senior Week 

June 5 to June 8, Inclusive, 1916. 

Monday, June 5th 

Girls’ Luncheon, Midland Valley Country Club. 

Class Banquet, Midland Valley Country Club (Informal). 

Tuesday, June 6th 

Class Picnic, Fern Glen, Mo. 

Class Play and Exercises, Francis Gymnasium. 

Wednesday, June 7th 

(Class Reunion Day) 

Pilgrimage, University Campus. 

Tree Planting, University Campus. 

Class Picture, University Hall. 

Class Luncheon, British Gardens. 

Senior-Faculty Baseball Game, Francis Field. 

Phi Beta Kappa Banquet. 

Thursday, June 8th 

Commencement Exercises, Francis Gymnasium. 

Senior Promenade, British Gardens. 



















































Pres. John Jones Sharon HP ^ ane Dorisy^aull 
Sec. Jessamine Humphrey Prices* 
Treas Jr min PeJer Sfupp 
3. cxf^. WalferValenfine Xouis Piffhan 


Page Sixty-one 









































Juniors 


Junior Class Roll 


College 


Helen Miriam Banister 
Isabelle Bark liras 
Margaret May Caffall 
Mary Callahan 
Elizabeth Callaway 
Bessie Campbell 
Helen Moore Crawford 
Emily Dauernhkim 
Vera Dauernheim 
Isabel Scherer Dolch 
Apble Louise Dubuque 
Genevieve Aimee Dubuque 
Lucille Eiseniiardt 
Eleanor Erskine 
Mamie Nadin Everley 
Else Marie Eysseli. 

June Edna Forshaw 
Jacob Forth, Jr. 

Gladys Marie Gautier 
Helen Ruth Goldstein 
Dwight Lyman Hampson 
Milo Lawrence Heideman 
Vato Carl Ilgen 
Hubert King Jackson 
Mildred Lucile Kalbfleisch 
Walter August Kamp 
Eugenie Margaret Keaney 
Viola Nellie Kerci-choff 
Mae Levy 
Kathryn Longmire 
Frances Samaniego Lucas 
Montague Lyon, Jr. 


Margaretha Roth 
Etha Mayo 

Constance McLaughlin 
Ida Katharine McNulty 
Rachel Metcalfe 
Martha Marie Meysenburg 
Izeyl Eva Miller 
Elma Gladys Moone 
Beatrice Jewell Moore 
Frederic Evan Morgan 
Marguerite Forrester Morrill 
Virginia Nathan 
Minerva Norr 
Jessamine Humphrey Price 
Ruth Alice Rhodes 
Marie Maull 
Florence Louise Runge 
Bessie Aspley Seifert 
Samuel Shapiro 
John Jones Sharon 
Leona Virginia Shepherd 
Anna Gibb Sheppard 
Clyde Heffner Smith 
Peter Frank Smith, Jr. 

John Webster Spargo 
Fielding Peery Stapleton 
Katherine Starbuck 
Brooke Stilweli. Thompson 
Marjorie Thompson 
Frances Wendl 
Alice Katharine Wills 


School of Engineering 


Robert Moran Arbuckle 
Lackland Beeding 
Roland Hf.nry Buchmueller 
James Monroe Connolly 
William Carman 
Johnston Gwin Craig 
Elmer Louis Deicke 
Roy Stanley Glasgow 
Herbert William Gronemf.yer 
Theodore Gupton 
Dwight Buel Harper 
Robert Harley Hartzog 
Harold Hall Harvey 
Paul Alexander Hof 
Henry Anton Jacobs 
William Joseph Koenig 
Walton Williams Loevy 


Joshua Sutherlin Logan 
Robert Woodgrift Macdonald 
Paul Graham Marsh 
William Bernard McSorley 
Henry Stevenson Miller 
Elias Adolph Neuman 
Walter Valentine Louis Pitthan 
Norvh.i. Harry Predock 
Charles Edward Sharp, 

Tames Cecil Shepherd 
Philip Leon Siteman 
Harry Dorsett Smith 
Tosepii Frederick Stickley 
Erwin Peter Stupp 
Malcolm Michaels Travis 
Thurwood Van Ornum 
Elmer Louis Werner 


Jr. 


Homer Case 


School of Architecture 

Jane Kuhn Pelton 



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Sophomore Class Roll 


College 


Karl John Balazs, Jr. 
Frances Martha Barbour 
Gladys Marie Beal 
William George Bechtold 
Mary Elizabeth Blackburn 
Geneva Emelia Boh man 
Sarah Thayer Booth 
Jeannette Wilhelmina 
Brinkman 

Jean Ingram Brookes 
Dorothy Brown 
Henry Bucksdorf 
Otto Jacob Burian 
Homer David Chandler 
Elizabeth Chapin 
Louis Cohen 
Mildred Edith Cohn 
Edwin Francis Dakin 
T homas Edward Dawson 
Bertha Mae Dent 
Louise Marion Dickson 
Francis Paston Douglas 
FIenry Philip Duncker 
Susie Icie Entzeroth 
Arthur Esseiiman 
Helen Ette 
Marguerite Fisch 
Marguerite Fleming 
Lois Stevenson Forsythi; 
Minna Louise Fox 
Mabel Freeman 


\rmand Dehner Fries 
Carla Louise Cewe 
Adele Grafeman 
Theodore Henry Hanser 
Alexis Frank Hartmann 
Adolph Mason Hof.nny 
Clara Frieda Hopmann 
Dorothy Jackes 
Aphrodite Maria Jannopoulo 
Helen Tattkrsall Johnston 
Dorothy Mary Kalbfell 
Marion Elizabeth Keene 
Lois Keim 

Alonzo Rouse Kieffer 
Ralph Edwin Kleinschmidt 
Bertha Johanne Koehler 
Helen Sarah Korngold 
Harry William Kkoeger 
Helen Johnston Kropf 
Abe Lerneij 

Louise Elise Luedkking 
Randolph Smith Lyon 
Margaret Cray Martin 
John Collins McKittrick 
Martha Meyer 
Robert Frank Miller 
John Rayl Morris 
Max Starkloff Muench 
Vernon McClure Parkinson 
Sidney Towner Phelan 
Mildred Edith Phelps 


Celeste Plank 
Horace Wiley Pote 
Faith Genevieve Putnam 
Margaretta Sophia Rapp 
Juniktta Emily Reller 
Lucile Sophie Riedel 
Marie Evelyn Robinson 
Nellie Robnktt 
Norma Elizabeth Sante 
Pauline Frances Sarason 
Inez Marie Schageman 
Olivia Stocke Schrof.ter 
Edith Mti.lkr Schulein 
Grace Estelle Sewing 
Zelda Ysobel Siegfried 
Esther Rebecca Simon 
William Skelcher 
Edgar Walter Spinzig 
Eleanor Dickinson Stevens 
Clara Marie Stieoemeyer 
Lillian Laura Stupp 
Caldwell Blenkord Summers 
Lucy Taylor 

Olive Margaret Underhill 
Albert Wall 

Mildred Longfellow Wass 
Paul Kingsley Webb 
Hazel Olivia White 
Mary Irma Willett 
Grace Miller Woods 
Louis Gabriel Zelson 


School of Engineering 


Wilbur Cook Adams 
William James Anderson, 
William Weston Bi.flock 
Martin Morris Blufston 
John Seari.es Boulden 
Everett Lee Brooks 
James Albert Crowiius 
Frank Jack Danglade 
George Fred Driemeyer 
Chris Louis Fontana 
Jack Bruce Frif.i.ingsdorf 
Samuel Gregory Hai.lett 
Reed Bone Harkness 
Ray Outhouse Jackson 


Jr. 


Charles Crabb Johann 
\rthur Albert Joraschky 
Otis Edmund Keough 
Berthoi.p Lambert Lance 
David Franklin Leavitt 
Arthur William LIndhoi.m 
Harold Ellsworth Mateer 
George Edward Mellow 
Lester Solomon Munchweileh 
George Ernest Owen 
William Mason Perry 
Sam Polinsky 
Harry George Reichard 
Eugene Charles Renard 


Robert Rex Robinson 
Albert William Roth 
George Henry Schaetzel 
Leon Schwartzman 
Melbert Edgar Schwarz 
Walter Joseph Skrainka 
Herbert Arthur Strain 
Irwin William TureCZEk 
Harold Morgan Van Horn 
Willis Wade Walters 
Charles Rives Watkins 
John Richard Weipert 
Sidney Weiss 


School of Architecture 


Burton Leonard Austin 
Herbert Jesse Rf.ed Barrett 


William Pauly Pohrer 


James Jasper Searcy 
William Ripgfxy Young 






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1916 Rules for Class Fight 



HE Class Fight Rules of 1916, drawn up by the Student 
Council, the administrative head of the contest, and ap¬ 
proved by the Freshman arid Sophomore Classes, were 
considerably different from the rules governing former 
fights. 

Instead of the old tree fight, the contest was placed 
entirely on the ground by providing a seven-foot wood 
stockade surrounding a fourteen-foot wooden flagpole, upon which the 
Sophomore banner flew. The pole was neither to he greased nor other¬ 
wise treated to hinder anyone climbing it. There had to be one “dry” 
approach to the stockade, at least twenty feet wide. In breaking into 
the stockade, in which the Sophomores were stationed, the Freshmen 
could not employ ladders, dirt, or weapons other than two-foot ropes, 
with which the Sophomores also were provided. Use of the fist and 
kicking were prohibited. 

The fight, held the night before the Christmas holidays, was to 
begin at seven o’clock at night. From seven until eleven both sides 
could capture men of the other side; from eleven to four in the morning 
no activity was allowed within the fight boundaries; from four to seven 
general fighting, except at the fortification, could take place. Then, from 
seven to nine, the battle for the Sophomore flag should wage. But 
should the Freshmen have not found the stockade by that time, they 
were given until eight o’clock, when they would be directed to it. If 
the Freshmen succeeded in securing the flag by nine o’clock they were 
adjudged the winners. If the flag still flew at that time the Sophomores 
were victorious. 

The boundaries for the fight were: east, Pennsylvania avenue; 
north, Kirkwood-Ferguson tracks and Ladue road; west. Me Knight 
road; south, Clayton road. 

Under no circumstances could the fight cost either class over $100, 
and all structures erected had to be replaced by classmen only. 

The penalty for the infringement of any rule was the disqualification 
of ten men picked by the president of the non-offending class. 


Page Sixty-seven 




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The Freshman Class Roll 


College 


La whence Addington 
Evadne Alden 
Lyle McDowell Allen 
Lucy Rogers Andrews 
Emanuel Arnovitz 
Donald Reed Arthur 
Florence Page Aydlette 
Dorothy Gertrude Aylesbury 
Zella Marie Bandy 
Alice Regina Barkhof.eer 
Lincoln Barker 
Martha Barkley 
Beth Barnett 
Edward Coleman Barntdge 
Francis Harold Barnidge 
Bertram Louis Bersche 
Thomas Charles Biriisall 
Wyllys King Bliss 
Mabel Blumenstock 
Edward Xavier Boeschenstein 
Grace Boyle 

Margaret Elizabeth Braun 
Theodore Christian Braun 
Louise Mattie Breeding 
William Hugo Broeder 
Fern Brokaw 
Carrie Noemie Bryan 
Minette Margaret Buddecke 
Dorothea Regina Burbach 
Howard Burt- 
Marie Byrne 
Mildred Roselund Candy 
Francis John Canepa 
Morris Carnovsky 
Carol Skinner Cole 
James Gleason Conzelman 
John Watson Cook 
May Bouchelle Cornwall 
Harvey Mudd Cravens 
Theodore Wright Crossen 
Helen Curtiss 
Clara Louise Danglade 
Mary Esther Darley 
Doris Margaret Darrach 
Frances Elizabeth Davis 
Virginia de Liniere 
William Joseph Dieckmann 
Reinhold Emil Dietzschold 
William Dock 
Marie Odille Dodge 
Marie Elsie Donk 
Beatrice Dreidel 


Helen Dyer 
Martha Emily Dyer 
George Engelsmann 
Martin Feeney Eng man, Jr. 
Irwin PIerman Eskeles 
Dorothy Mary Falk 
Hazel Kathryn Farmer 
Edna Gayle Ferguson 
Margery Esther Finigan 
Bessie Clare Flanagan 
Julia Marie Flanagan 
Florence Frees 
IIazeljane Friton 
Stella Anna Garden 
Marian Gardner 
John Henry Gerling 
Edward Henry Giessow 
Octavia Carolyn Gradwoiil 
Louise Grant 
Margaret Matilda Greer 
Marguerite Lenora Grolton 
Henry Clarence Gronert 
George Breckenridge Groves 
Maud Emma Guhman 
Flora Adair Gunnerson 
Dorothy Haase 
Dorothy Hackman 
John Charles Harris 
Dorothy Hart 
Frances Byers Hays 
Anita Hermann 
Mildred Asrury Hess 
Dorothy Garfielda Hetlage 
Virginia Hilliker 
Victor Bryan Hoester 
Fannie Hoffman 
Mary Hope 

Russell James Horsefif.ld 
Margaret Hannah Howes 
Ruth Hunt 
Helen Hutchens 
Charles King Imse 
Jane Dukfee Johns 
Bert Martin Johnson 
Pierce Johnson 
Florence Johnston 
Waldo Lee Johnston 
Julia Annette Jonah 
Harry Wtlmer Jones 
Richard Jones 
Carmen Sylva Kahn 
Lucille Bernardinf. Kahn, 


Charles Field Keebaugh 
Chari.es Burton Kkeble 
Virginia Clare Keefe 
Sarah Amelia Kennedy 
Edith Dorothy Kidwell 
Marquise Klepper 
William Benjamin Knight 
Karoi. Abraham Korngold 
Her.minie Lena Kurz 
Stella Louise Lange 
Martin Lasersohn 
Ruth Leeper 
Edgar Martin Lew in 
Mary Parks Lewis 
Curtis Harry Lour 
Sheridan Knight Loy 
Gertrude Augusta Lucas 
Frances Woodward Mauley 
Marjorie Lindell Manger 
Erwin Henry Marting 
Melvin Meyer Matties 
Helen Louise May 
Claude Webster McElwee 
Josephine Margaret Michael 
William Alexander Michael 
Warren Seward Miller 
Allen Ford Modisette 
Ruth Agnes Moffat 
Bonnie Lucille Moore 
Paul Franklin Morse 
Royi.e Marshall Moseley 
Gladys Mueller 
Irene Crusius Mueller 
Frances Eleanor Murch 
David McChf.yne Me well 
Joseph Newman 
George Nobde 
Nelson Tinsley Pearson 
Bernard Wesley Peck 
Frances Armina Pinkel 
Howard Bryan Poole 
Martha Udylle Potts 
Mary Frances Price 
Margaret Ellen Ray 
Ethel Louise Reitti 
Carl Rippjn 

Charlotte Bruce Robertson 
Beulah Roiies 

Mign.on Jeanette Rosenthal 
Sylvia Birdie Rosenzweig 
Marie Rothman 
Don Onnis Russell 


Page Seventy 
















M B IB P IW ! 



Abe Sachar 

Jake Schermer 

Adele Catherine Scherrer 

Celeste Marie Schramm 

Ben Senturia 

Adele Shea 

Frank Havelock Simmons 
Mary Hamilton Skeen 
Meta Vivian Small 
David Rhodes Sparks 
John Sperandeo 
Charles Erwin Staudinger 
Mabel Williams Stillwell 
Lewis Batchelder Stuart 
Anne Leonore Studt 
Stuart Eugene Sutherland 
Ward White Summerville 


Felice Josephine Swords 
Gladys Elizabeth Tate 
Arthur Worcester Thacker 
Grace Norwood Threadgill 
Billy Tichenor 
Laura Tichenor 
Frank Justin Tracy 
Irl George Tremain 
Frances Summa Treutler 
Mao-Te Tsao 
Elfriede Augusta Uthoff 
Arkell Meyers Vaughn 
Minnie Anna Vavra 
Lena Celia Vickers 
Harry Osiiorn Vosburgh 
Thomas Hall Wagner, Jr. 


Rogers Bradley Allen 
Lafayette Louis Altenbernd 
Doxai.ii Berry Baker 
Robert Lee Bankson 
Arthur William Becker, Jr. 
Elmer Henry Bender 
George Henry Berger 
Ira Edward Berry 
Julius Blust, Jr. 

Edward Lindi.ey Bowles 
Lucien Morris Brigham 
Herbert Frederick Briner 
Bernard John Brinkman 
Douglas Miller Bryden 
William Casimir Burgdorff 
James Robert Chandler 
Marshall Tilden Cree 
William Walter Cunliff 
Rex Elver Dewhirst 
Harold Hite Francis 
Ralph Foli.en Fuchs 
George De Witt Groves 
Charles Evelen Hamlin 
Warren Conn Healey 
Arthur Louis Heintze 
Robert Henderson 


Irwin Walker 

Lida Crenshaw Waller 

Jacob Wax 

William Charles Wayne 
Ruth Amelia Weber 
Philip Sheridan Webster 
Max Weinberg 
Richard Weisert 
Dean Welch 
Pauline Westphaelinger 
Richard Ai.derson Whitton 
Harry William Wiese 
Mary Jean Williams 
Lenore Wolf 
Emma Wolff 
Roberta Woodson 
Lucille Emma Zerweck 


School of Engineering 

Calvin Hermer 
John William Hopson 
Morris Jacks 
Austin Aloysius King 
Milton Mansfield Kinsey 
Sidney Pockels Kollme 
Richard Henry Kremer 
William Frederick Krf.xxing 
Robert Sydney Lane 
Harold Theodore Lang 
Wilson Lewis 
Albert Gus Loeffel 
William Herman Luyties 
Robert Lee M a up in, Jr. 
Stephen Duncan McCali.um 
Jamerson Carson McCormick 
Samuel Marion McElvaine 
Barclay Francis Meador 
Charles Edward Morgan 
Lawrence Myers 
Arthur Thomas Nash 
Russell Braxton Nash 
Glenn Roth Newby 
Edward Joseph O’Brien 
John Shelby Pipkin 
Douglas Eugene Procter 


Frank Charles Richard 
Rauchenstein 
Joseph Razek 
Ralph Dewey Riddle 
Sol Rubenstein 
Eugene Lee Schrader 
Hermann Carl Schroedel 
Stanley Sellors 
Aaron Harold Siianvet 
Glenn Robert Sheriff 
Chauncey Forward Shultz 
Isidor Singer 

Ralph Nicholas Skrainka 
Charles Thomas Spalding 
Dick Dryden Starke 
Dewey St. John 
John Andrew Strauch 
Roland Smith Tatt 
Charles Def.rf. Tebbetts 
Don Tripodi 

William Rothwell Watts 
Eugene Stix Wf.il 
Leonard Robert Woods 
Ernesto Wulff 
Charles Hugh Wyman 


II 


School of Architecture 


Van Alvin Denison 
Charles Merriman Gray 
Cloyd Victor Gustafson 


Page Scvcnly-onc 


Ralph Cole Hall 
James Arndt I-Ierron 
Edward Wellington Mateer 
Spencer George Rose 


Gilbert Hempstead Meyers 
Clemens Nicklaus 
Alfred Harry Norrish 















Freshman Traditions 


Men 

1. Freshmen must not smoke pipes on the University grounds, 
except in the Freshman locker room or in the dormitories. 

2. All Freshmen must wear caps until after the Christmas holidays. 
The Freshman cap is made of gray cloth with a cherry red button. At 
no time may a Freshman wear a derby on the campus. 

3. Freshmen must occupy allotted seats in the rear at all special 
chapel exercises. 

4. The stone wall bounding the southwest corner of the Quad¬ 
rangle shall be the Freshman wall; the one on the northwest corner the 
Sophomore wall. 

5. Juniors and Seniors only are allowed to frequent the steps and 
arcade of Library Flail. 

6. Seniors only are allowed to frequent the steps and archway of 
University Flail. 

7. Freshmen must wear no badges, buttons or pins, except those 
of the Freshman Class Society', national college fraternities, and W. U. 
A. A. button. 

8. No Freshman shall wear a mustache or sideburns. 

9. Freshmen are to use only- the locker rooms assigned to them. 

10. Freshmen are excluded from Junior and Senior Proms. 

11. No Freshman shall escort a woman to a football game. 

Women 

1. Freshman girls must wear green recognition buttons until No¬ 
vember the first. 

2. Freshman girls must not wear hats in the class-rooms. 

3. Freshman girls are not allowed to frequent the steps and arcade 
of Ridgley Library. 

4. Freshman girls are not allowed to “fuss” or loiter on the campus. 

5. Freshman girls must wear no badges, buttons, or pins except 
those of the Freshman Class, college fraternities, and W. U. A. A. 
buttons. 


Page Seveniy-hvo 











'/a y////////////////////////////////////^^^^ 


Unclassified Students 


College 


Walter El win Abell 
Abraham Elija Abramowitz 
Mrs. Harry Ackerman 
Harvey Byars Alban 
Emily Alexander 
Bronson Storrs Barrows 
Julius Henry Frederick 
Becker 

Joseph Alexander Bernard 
Olen John Bott 
Anna Fernando Bredies 
Alpha Martha Britt 
Foster Hightower Brown 
I j hilip Cullen Brown 
Robert Thomas Burch 
Jeannette Burke 
Charlotte Clark 
Frank Coffey 
Eleanor Niedrixghaus 
Cozzens 

Edwin Raymond Culver, Jr. 
Mrs. Charles Danforth 
Lulah Delmar Dipple 
Erwin Jacob Doerner 
Mildred Donnell 
Emma Mary Fick 
Samuel Frederick Charles 
Fiedler 

Russell Gibson 
Charles Edward Gilliland 


Joseph Grand 
Antoinette Greiner 
Edward Benedict Grogan 
Fritz Kluendf.r Grolock 
Florence Groschax 
John Grossman 
Edward Christopher Hall 
Lawrence Aloysius Hanley 
Julia Loretto Hannigan 
Henry Simms Hartzog, Jr. 
Herbert August Hausman 
Hazel Bell Hayden 
Mrs. Florence Hendricks 
Margaret Elizabeth Jackes 
Meredith Criag Jones 
William Frederick Keil 
John Hixon Kinsella 
Jesse Allen Koechig 
William Kountz 
Elsa Kraus 

Harkiette Lucille Krause 
Florence Dorothy Leschen 
Selma Mae Levinson 
Joanna May Lindsey 
Mrs. Gustav Lippmann 
Oliver Wiluson Lohr 
Gertrude Maginn 
Ben Phillips Manheimer 
William Grant McColley 
Lex Glin McCutchen 


Roy James Beck 
Arthur Ellermann 
Chauncey Pilcher Frier 


School of Engineering 


Demosthenenes 

Constant! n e J a n nopou lo 
Frank Burt Lester 


Harold Turk Smutz 


Gabriel Paschal Dubuque 
William Ray Ferris 


Page Seventy-three 


School of Architecture 


Stewart McCormack 
Glenn Phelps 



David Millar 
Katherine Jane Miller 
Richard Henry Mink 
Eugenia Frances Nolen 
William O’Sullivan 
Bessie Parks 

Henriette Selma Peltason 
Raymond Peters 
Sarah Leah Rifkin 
Jacques Adolph Rosenblatt 
Enos Jennings Rowley 
Edwin Henry Schrieber 
Frank Laurie Scott 
Mrs. Rose Semple 
Margaret Mary Sheahan 
Mildred King Smith 
Ludd Myrl Spivey 
Paula Nelda Stockstrom 
William Henry Stratman 
Hubert Wattles Swender 
Claude Roy Tharp 
Milton Henry Tucker 
Mary Malvina Voorhees 
Catherine Wagner 
Martha Emma Watts 
Fred William Wedel 
Jeanne Wertheimer 
James Marshall Wilcoxson 
Frederick Herber Wulfing 
Marguerite Zoff 


Roger William Renkel 
William Flewellyn 

Saunders, Jr 


Albert Carl Wipke 


Frank Brien Rowan 
Wilfrid Burritt Verity 








































































































































Richard L. Goode, A.B., A.M., LL.D. 

^ICHARl) L. GOODE, Dean of the Faculty of the Law School, born in Henry 
County, Kentucky, February 4, 1855; A.B., Drury College, 1876; M.A., Drury 
College; LL.D., Drury College; Principal High School of Springfield, Mo.; 
Superintendent of Schools, Springfield, Mo.; practiced law, 1879-1901, doing general 
professional business, acting for four years as attorney for the Kansas City, Fort 
Scott and Memphis Railway Company; also served as the City Attorney of the city of 
Springfield, as J resident of the Board of Education for six years, and was for years 
one of the Trustees of Drury College. In January, 1901, he took his seat as a member 
of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, having been elected to that office in November, 
1900; remained a member of said Court until September, 1910, when he became 
counsel for Mercantile Trust Company of St. Louis, in which capacity' he served 
until January, 1915. Became Dean of Washington University Law School, July, 1915. 


Page Seventy-six 





















ffiemom 



Faculty of the Law School 


Richard Livingston Goode, A.M., LL.D 
William W. Keysor, Litt.B., LI-.B. . 
Tyrrell Williams, A.B., LL.B. . 

Joseph H. Zumbalen, LL.B. 

Charles P. Williams, A.B. . 

Edward C. Eliot, A.M., LL.B. 

Jacob M. Laskly, LL.B. 

Frederick H. Bacon, LL.B. . 


Professor of Law, and Dean 
Professor of Law 
Professor of Law, and Madill 
Professor of Contracts and 
Commercial Law 
Professor of Law 
Madill Professor of Equity and 
Real Property, and Lecturer on 
Constitutional Law 
Lecturer on International Law 
Lecturer on Bankruptcy 
Lecturer on Insurance Law 


Page Seventy-seven 


































































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The Law School 


®e 56DIOR5 




Jerome G. Meyer 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary-Treasurer 
Hatchet Representative 


Jerome Gustave Meyer 
Mrs. Maude Wilson Stearns, A.B. 
David Berger 
Meredith Craig Jones 


11 


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Chari.es Elmer Altenbernd, Jr 


David Berger .St. Louis, Mo. 

Secretary-Treasurer, Pep Patrol (2, 3) ; Secre¬ 
tary-Treasurer of Law Class (2, 3, 4) ; Student 
Life (2) ; Assistant Manager of Football Team 
(2) ; Freshman Advisor (4). 


“13.” 


Emmet T. Carter, K.A., 4>.A.<I>. . 
Law Review (4). 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Thomas Dewesse Davis, 2.A.E., <I».A.*1>. . St. Louis, Mo. 
Thyrsus (1, 2, 3); Student Council (3); Presi¬ 
dent of Pan-Hellenic Association (4). 

Obelisk. 

Lock and Chain. 

“13.” 


John Edward Gaskill, Jr., K.2. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


I 


| 

Page Eighty If 
i.% 


II 

| 











































































Trvr.rus- *-'*^^*** ;•»« **vv w iv/i'.v.- 


Percy E. Meier, 2.A.E. 




William Kotskeax .... St. Louis, Mo. 
Civics Club (2, 3) ; Class Basket-ball (2, 3, 4). 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Jerome Gustave Meyer, B.6.IT. . . St. Louis, Mo. 

Pep Patrol (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Vice-President (2): 
President, Law Class (4) ; Secretary, Washington 
University Union (4) ; Captain Class Basket-ball 
(1) : Class Baseball (1, 2) ; Class Basket-ball 
(4) ; Varsity Baseball (2); Varsitv Football 
(2. 3, 4). 

Lock and Chain. 


Theodore Alvax Morrey, Jr., 2.A.E. . St. Louis, Mo. 


Charles Peretti, Jr. . 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Page Eighty-two 




































School 



8 2 


■Vi 


Raymond Peters, K.2. 

Varsity Football (4). 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Edgar Hugh Schwarzf.nbach . . E. St. Louis, Ills. 

Captain, Class Football Team (2) ; Class Basket¬ 
ball (4) ; Varsity Football (4). 

“13.” 


Frank L. Scott, Jr., 4’A6. 
Artus. 


St. Louis Mo. 


George Louis Stem .viler, 4>A>I>. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


Donald Wilson Stewart, K.S. . Kansas City, Mo. 
President, Law Class (2): Thyrsus (2, 3, 4): 
Assistant Business Manager (2) ; Business Man¬ 
ager (3, 4) ; Eliot Magazine (3) ; Assistant Busi¬ 
ness Manager (3) : Pep Patrol (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Vice- 
President (3) ; President (4) ; Assistant Cheer 
Leader (3); Cheer Leader (4). 

“13." 

Pralma. 


Page Eighty-three 

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Franx is R. Stout .... St. Louis, Mo. 
Class Football (1, 2) ; Class Basket-ball, Class 
Track, Varsity Football (4) : Varsity Basket-ball 
(3, 4) ; Captain (4) ; Varsity Track (3) ; Athletic 
Representative of Law Class (4). 

“13.” 


Hliiert W. Swender, S.N. . . St. Louis, Mo. 

Thyrsus (2, 3, 4) ; Thyrsus Annual (3) ; Uni¬ 
versity Band (2. 3, 4) ; Business Manager (3) ; 
President (4) ; Civics Club (2. 3) ; University 
Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2); Pep Pa¬ 
trol (2, 3, 4). 


Harry Lee Thomas, B.e.II. . . Carrollton, Mo. 

Class Basket-ball (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Football 
(.1, 2) ; Student Life (2, 3) ; Associate Editor 
(3) ; Managing Editor (3) ; Photographer, 1917 
Hatchet; Hatchet Representative (2, 3) ; Busi¬ 
ness Manager, Law Review (4). 


I 






Maurice See Weeks, d>.A.4>. . Williamsburg, Mo. 

Editorial Board, Law Review (4). 


Ni> 






Samuel F. C. Fiedeer, 'h.B.K. 


St. Louis, Mo. 


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Milton Roy Stahl 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary-T rcasurcr 
Sergeant-at-Arms 
Hatchet Representative 


Milton Roy Stahl 
Marguerite Zoff 
Foster Highwater Brown 
William Frederick Marten, 
George Daniel Bartlett 


Page Eiglity-five 


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2 I 


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Middle Law Class of 1918 


Members 


John Blair Abbott, Ph.B. 
Harvey Byars Alban 
Charles Claflix Allen, Jr., A.B. 
George Daniel Bartlett 
Joseph Alexander Bernard 
Bernard P. Bogy, Jr. 

Alvin Christian Bohm 
Foster High water Brown 
Philip Bryan 

Stanley Don Campbell, A.B. 
Robert Walston Chubb, A.B. 
William Robert Coyne 
William Cranch Eliot 
Arthur Raymond Felsen 
Charles Broaddus Francis, A.B. 
Harry Wilks Fulbrigiit. A.B. 
John William Geppert 
Archie E. Groff, A.B. 

John Grossman 

Walter Frank Edward Hehman 
Lynn Harold Holland 
Stanford Hollocher 
John Meston Holmes, A.B. 


Sylvester Charles Horn 
Thomas Stanislaus Horn 
William Frederick Keil 
James Hiram Kelley 
Gertrude Margaret Kipp 
Kenneth Lawing 

Irving Goff McCann, A.B., A.M., B.D. 
William Frederick Marten, M.D. 
William Edward Martens 
William Claiborne Martin 
Harry Nettle 
Harry John Neuling 
Charles Loan Newport 
Norman Webber Pemberton 
Themistocles Phiambolis 
Frederick William Schwarz 
W. Lawrence Settle, A.B. 

Milton Roy Stahl, A.B. 

Milton Henry Tucker 
Vernon Leroy Turner 
A. E. Underwood, A.B. 

H. Clarke Venable 
Marguerite Zoff 


Page Eighty-six 


























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i 


The Law School 


SfeJVDI 0R5 




i. | ^fll 


ulH 




Frederick H. Wolfing 

Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Sccretary-T reasurer 
Sergcant-at-Arms 
Hatchet Representative 


Frederick Heriser Wulfing 
Irving C. Neal, A.B. 

Hiram Newton Holliday 
George Thomas Williams 
Fritz Kluender Grolock 


Page Eighty-seven 































The Law School 


Junior Law Class of 1919 



Eugene Ellwood Adams 
G. Irvin Bringes 
Herbert Edward Bryant 
Traubel Thomas Burke 
Clarence Drew Cowdery 
James Marsh Douglas 
Lee Russell Dudley 
James Vernor Dunbar 
Fred Richard Foelsch 
George Srence Fricke 
Stanley Berkson Friedman 
Joseph Harry Grand 
Fritz Ki.uender Grolock 
Chester Thomas Hanley 
Clarence Elmer Hastings 
Herbert August Hausman 
Henry Anthony Hoeffer 
Hiram Newton Holi.aday 


Junior Law Class 

Elton M. Hyder 
Carl Otto Kamp 
John Hixon Kinsella 
Alfred Foster Kirsch 
Harold Edward Knight 
Joseph John Korando 
Otto Henry Kortkamp, Jr. 
Andrew William Kurrus 
Ruby Laventhal 
Ezra Lee Lockhart 
William G. McCoi.ley, Jr. 
Robert Harvey McRoberts 
Ben Phillips Mani-ieimer 
George Strodtman 
Metcalfe, A.B. 

David L.- Millar 
Harold Holmes Milligan 
Paul Moll 


Edwin Huttig Nahm 
Irving C. Neale, A.B. 

Irl Benjamin 

Roseniilum, A.B. 

Walter Henry Schlueter 
Connor Bernard Shanley 
John Joseph Sheerin 
William Grahame Simrall 
Will Mont Smith 
William Edwin Stewart 
Charles Trued, A.B. 

Harry Edgar Tucker 

Barrett Weber 

Sol Weinberg 

George Thomas Williams 

Murrell Wilson 

Fred Morris Wolfe 

Frederick Herder Wulfing 


Special Students 


Edward Carlton Bloodworth 

Milo Bailey Bunn 

John Bertwell Ewing, A.B. 

Vincent Dominick Gallo 

John Hogan 

Carl Julius Koehler 

George Brandon Whissell 


Marion Leschen 
William D. Lewis 
Fred Lewis Naumer 
F. Joe Retch man 
Samuel C. Rizer 
Sai l Barney Spitzer 


Page Eighty-eight 













































The Medical School 



Philip A. Shaffer, Ph.D. 


Q HILIP A. SHAFFER, Ph.D., Professor of Biological Chemistry, and Dean of 
the Medical School. A.B., West Virginia University, 1900; Ph.D., Harvard 
University, 1904: Assistant, Fellow, and Instructor in Chemical Pathology, 
Cornell University, 1904-10; Resident Assistant Pathological Chemist, McLean Hos¬ 
pital, Waverley, Mass., 1900-03; Chemist to Huntington Fund for Cancer Research, 
1906-10; Pathological Chemist and Head of Chemical Section of the Laboratory of 
Bellevue Hospital, 1909-10; Chemist to the Barnes Hospital. 


Page Ninety 





































Philip A. Shaffer, Ph.D. . 

Edward Watts Saunders, M.D. 

Norman B. Carson, M.D. . 
John Blasdel Shapleich, M.D. 
George Dock, Sc.D., M.D. . 
Joseph Erlanger, M.D. 
Eugene L. Opie, M.D. . 

Robert J. Terry, M.D. 

Fred Towslky Murphy, M.D. 
Leo Loeb, M.D. 

Henry Schwarz, M.D. 

Paul Yoer Tupper, M.D. 
Francis Rhodes Fry, M.D. 
Harvey Gilmer Mudd, M.D. 
George Marvine Tuttle, M.D. 
Elsworth S. Smith, M.D. . 
Arthur Eugene Ewing, M.D. 
Adoi.f Alt, M.D. 

Greenfield Sludf.r, M.D. 


Martin F. Engman, M.D. 

Ernst Friedrich Tiedemann, M.D. 
George Canry Robinson, M.D. 
Albert E. Taussig, M.D. 

Ernest Sachs, M.D. 

Borden S. Veeder, M.D. 

Dennis E. Jackson, PhD., M.D 
Charles H. Danorth, Ph D. 
Harry Sturgeon Crosskx, M.D. 
Willard Bartlett, M.D. 

Vilray P. Blair, M.D. 

Meyer Wiener, M.D. . 

George Gei.i.horx, M.D. 

Fred J. Taussig, M.D. . 
Nathaniel Allison, M.D. 
Malvern B. Clopton, M.D. 

Sidney I. Schwab, M.D. 

Walter S. Thomas, M.D. 

T. Lucien Morris, Ph.D. 

Francis M. Barnes, Jr., M.D. 
Robert A. Gesell, M.D. 

Ralph Walter Mills, M.D 

Page Ninety-one 


Dean of the Medical School and Professor 
of Biological Chemistry 
Professor Emeritus of Diseases of Children 
and Clinical Midwifery 
Professor Emeritus of Surgery 
Clinical Professor of Otology 
Professor of Medicine 
Professor of Physiology 
Professor of Pathology 
Professor of Anatomy 
Professor of Surgery 
Professor of Comparative Pathology 
Clinical Professor of Obstetrics 
Clinical Professor of Surgery 
Clinical Professor of Neurology 
Clinical Professor of Surgery 
Clinical Professor of Pediatrics 
Clinical Professor of Medicine 
Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology 
Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology 
Clinical Professor of Laryngology and 
Rhinology 

Clinical Professor of Dermatology 
Associate Professor of Bacteriology 
Associate Professor of Medicine 
Associate Professor of Medicine 
Associate Professor of Surgery 
Associate Professor of Pediatrics 
Associate Professor of Pharmacology 
Associate Professor of Anatomy 
Associate in Gynecology 
Associate in Surgery 
Associate in Surgery 
Associate in Ophthalmology 
Associate in Gynecology 
Associate in Gynecology 
Associate in Orthopedic Surgery 
Associate in Surgery 
Associate in Neurology 
Associate in 
Associate in 
Associate in 
Associate in 
Associate in 


Pathology 

Biological Chemistry 
Psychiatry 
Physiology 
Medicine 

















































§1 

11 


Edwin A. Baumgartner, Ph.D. 
Philip C. Jeans, M.D. . 

Albert F. Koetter, M.D. 

Malcolm A. Bliss, M.D. 

Walter Baumgarten, M.D. 
William E. Sauer, M.D. 

Henry J. Storrs, M.D. 

John R. Caulk, M.D. . 

William H. Mook, M.D. 

Frederick T. Fahlen, M.D. 
Jerome E. Cook, M.D. . 

Arthur O. Fisher, M.D. 

Leland Barton Alford, M.D. 
Grandison Delaney Royston, M.D. 
H. Edward Miller, M.D. 

Charles Arm in Gundelach, M.D. 
Llewellyn Sale, M.D. 

Barney Brooks, M.D. . 

Adrien S. Bleyf.r, M.D. 

Louis Henry Hempelmann, M.D 
Hugh McCulloch, M.D. 

Theodore Carl Hempelmann, M.D. 
Howard Homf.r Bell, M.D. 
Herbert S. Gasser, M.D. 

Frank N. Wilson, M.D. 

Gaylord Swindle, Ph.D. 

George C. Mackay, LL.B. 

Adolph G. Schlossstein, M.D. 
James Archer O’Reilly, M.D. 
Julius H. Gross, M.D. . 

Walter Fisciiel, M.D. . 

John Green, Jr., M.D. . 

Louis Kaufman Guggenheim, M 
Meredith Rutherford Johnston, 
Harry W. Layman, M.D. 

William Ewing Shahan, M.D. 
Quitman Underwood Newell, M 
Roger Sanford Hubbard, A.M. 
Robert Ernst Schi.uetf.r, M.D. 
Walter C. G. Kirchner, M.D. 
Charles Elihu Hyndman, M.D 
Phelps Grant Hurford, M.D. 
Charles Allen Stone, M.D. 
Daniel Francis Hociidoerfer, M 
William M. Robertson, M.D. 
Henry McClure Young, M.D. 
Frank Henry Ewerhardt, M.D 
Omar R. Sevin, M.D. 

Orro H. Schwarz M.D. 

William H. Olmsted, M.D. . 
Benjamin Landis Elliott. B.S. 
Drew William Luten, M.D. 

Joseph W. Lari more, M.D. . 

Jacob Jesse Singer, M.D. . 

Oscar F. Bradford, M.D. 

George Ives, M.D. . 

Edwin P. Lehman, M.D. 

L. S. Newman Walsh, M.D. 
Oliver H. Campbell, M.D. . 
Charles H. Eyermann, M.D. 


D. 

M.D 


D. 


D. 


Associate in Anatomy 

Associate in Pediatrics 

Associate in Otology 

Instructor in Psychiatry 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Laryngology 

Instructor in Obstetrics 

Instructor in Gcnito-Urinary Surgery 

Instructor in Dermatology 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Surgery 

Instructor in Neurology 

Instructor in Obstetrics 

Instructor in Laryngology and Rhinology 

Instructor in Laryngology and Rhinology 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Surgery 

Instructor in Pediatrics 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Pediatrics 

Instructor in Pediatrics 

Instructor in Pathology 

Instructor in Physiology 

Instructor in Medicine 

Instructor in Anatomy 

Instructor in Medical Jurisprudence 

Assistant in Obstetrics 

Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery 

Assistant in Ophthalmology 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Ophthalmology 

Assistant in Otology 

Assistant in Pediatrics 

Assistant in Otology 

Assistant in Ophthalmology 

Assistant in Obstetrics 

Assistant in Biological Chemistry 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Pediatrics 

Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery 

Assistant in Pathology 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Obstetrics 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Physiology and Pharmacology 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Pathology 

Assistant in Dermatology 

Assistant in Surgery 

Assistant in Comparative Pathology 

Assistant in Medicine 

Assistant in Medicine 

Page Ninety-two 


n.'.Vv; >Vi 
























. • 





The Medical School 





- 1 ) l IA LA 


a Q 




Henry S. O’Donnell 


Officers 


President . 

Vice-President .... 
Secretary-Treasurer 
Student Council Representative 
Hatchet Representative . 


Henry S. O’Donnell 
Bradford F. Dearing 
Edwin F. Robb 
Marshall Myers 
Robt. Mueller 


Page Ninety-three 


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The Medical School 


Guy D. Callaway, T.B.n. 
Varsity Football (4). 


Marshfield, Mo. 


Bradford F. Dearing 


Shelbyville, Ills. 


George Blaine Garrison, N.2.N. 
A.B.. Kansas State Univ. 
Class ’15. 


Eureka, Kan. 


Arthur H. Haynes, 4>.B.n. 

A. B., University of Kansas. 


Sabetha, Kan. 


A. Crump Kirby, N.2.N., K.A. . 

A.B., University of Arkansas. 
Class ’13. 


Harrison, Ark. 


Page Ninety-six 








































The Medical School 



Guy B. McArthur, T.IS.H., A.fi.A. Bloomville, N. Y. 
A.B., University of Missouri. 

Hatchet Representative (1). 

Class ’IS. 


Frank Powell McNalley, X.Z.X, . St. Louis, Mo. 
Gill Prize of Anatomy (1). 

B.S., Washington Univ. 

Class ’15. 


Michael D. Moran, N.2.N. . . Madison, Wis. 

B.S., Univ. of Wisconsin. 

Class ’15. 


Robert Mueller, 4>.B.n. ... St. Louis, Mo. 

Class Football (1) : Hatchet Representative (4). 
B.S., Washington Univ. 

Class ’15. 


George Marshall Myers, N.2.N. . St. Louis, Mo. 

B.S., Washington Univ. 

Student Council (4). 

Class ’15. 



jfteOicalSchooj' 


Page Ninety-seven 









































The 



Earl Weldon Netherton, 'KB.II. 
A.B., Missouri University. 
Class ’15. 


Gallatin, Mo. 


Henry St. Clair O’Donnell, 

N.2.N., A.T.8. . . . Lawrence, Kan. 

A.B., University of Kansas; President, Senior 
Class (1), Medical. 

Class ’15. 


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Kenneth Cleland Peacock, 

4>.K.'J/. ) N.2.N. 

B.S., University of Wisconsin 
Class ’15. 


Oconomowoc, Wis. 


Edwin F. Robb, 'EK.'K, ‘KB.II. 

A.B., University of Missouri. 


Kansas City, Mo. 


Harry W. Schumacher, F.B.n 
Vice-President (3). 


Altamont, Ills. 


Page Ninety-eight 

191 


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The Medical School 


Nelson Warren Sheley, 
N.2.N. A.fi.A. . 


. Independence, Mo. 


Albert Robert Toomey, N.-.N., A.fi.A. . Madison, Wis. 
A.B., University of Wisconsin. 

Class ’14. 


Frank Wallace, N.S.N. ... St. Louis, Mo 
Vice-President (3) ; Class Football (4). 


B.S., Washington University. 
Class ’16. 


John E. Wattenberg 


Bahnson Weathers . 



Berger, Mo. 


Bynum, N. C. 





H 


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The Medical School 


The Junior Medical Class of 1917 



Members 


Christian Andres Andresen, A.B. 
Bertus Clyde Ball, B.S. 

Jacob Wood Bergstrom, A.B. 
Glover H. Copher 
George Francis Cressvvell, A.B. 
Anthony Bigelow Day, B.S. 
James Reeve Dean 
Martin Joseph Fardy, B.S., M.S. 
William Pope Gasser 
Lee Pettit Gay, A.B. 

Wilbur Goodson Gillett, A.B. 
Arthur Clark Goff 
Paul Chesley Hodges 
Elmer Nathaniel Liljedahl, A.B. 
Henry Fremont Lueking, B.S. 
Arthur Edwin Mahle, B.S. 

Sanford 


Hugh Worthington Maxey 
Joseph Wallace McKee 
William Leland Mitchell 
Hugo Muench, Jr., A.B. 

Charles Darrell O’Keefe, A.B. 

Earl Calvin Padgett, B.S. 

Barendra Kumar Palit, B.S. 

Johannes Friedrich Pessel, B.S. 

George Merritt Polk, A.B. 

Wayne Arthur Rupe, A.B. 

Horace Harvey Shackelford, A.B., A.M. 
William Ernest Stone, A.B. 

Ephraim Alvin Stranquist, B.S. 

Olof Sundwall, A.B. 

Edwin Harold Terill 
James Albert Tesson, A.B. 

Martin Withers 


Page One Hundred 



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Duff Shedric Allen 

Otto St. Clair Krebs 

1 

George Wilson Belcher 

Oliver William Lohr 

f 

Edward Alphonse Blondin 

Marriott True Morrison 

1$ 

Arthur Charles Brooks 

Raymond Lester Murdoch, A.B. 

u 

Urban Justus Busier 

William Clarence Oepts 

f 

Louis Clare Cargile, A.B. 

Mort D. Pelz 

1 

William Goodwin Coleman 

Samuel Edward Pesetke 

1 

Selmes Paul Funkhouser 

Rudolph Virchow Powell 

1 

Guy Huskinson Hopkins, A.B. 

Arthur Ben Raffl 

f 

F. Clemont Howard 

Edwin Henry Rohlfing 

II 

Carl Otto Kohliiry 

Abraham Jerome Sparks 

11 

William 

Georce Wander, B.S. 





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'/////// S'* //* 







President ......... Duff S. Allen 

Vice-President . Carl Kohlbry 

Secretary . George W. Belcher 

Treasurer . Oliver W. Lohr 

Hatchet Representative . Abraham Sparks 


m 








































T h e 


Medical Sc 

The Freshman Medical 


Class of 1918 



Members 


Bransforu Louis Aoelsberger 
Herbert Allen Alvis 
Robert Lee Andrae 
Paul Shirmer Barker, A.B. 
Carl Ellsworth Black, A.B. 
William Ranke Bohne 
Clifton H. Briggs 
Archie Dreyfus Carr 
William Stokely Carter 
James Bray Costen 
Christopher G. Gaard 
Harold Carl Gaebe 
Alfred Goldman, A.B. 

Samuel Beckf.r Grant 
Marshall Wesley Hall 
William Andrew Hudson 
Frederick Augustus Jostes 
Patrick Harlan Kennedy 


Hiram Shaw Liggett 
Thomas Stafford Love 
Arthur Walton McGinnis, A.B. 
Herman Moses Meyer 
Walter Roger Moore 
Stuart Mudd, B.S. 

Leonard Joseph Owen 
Grider Penick, A.B. 

Charles Melvin Schiek 
Theodore Hammond Smith 
Guss Byron Steward, A.B. 
Henry Theodore Summa, A.B. 
Donald Arthur Thompson 
Ernest Elwood Tremain 
Hermann W. Wellmerling, B.S. 
Harvey Lester White 
Lester Leo Williams 
Thomas Lf.land Yancey, A.B. 


Page One Hundred Four 
























Officers 

President . William S. Carter 

Vice-President . Harvey L. White 

Secretary . Patrick H. Kennedy 

Treasurer . Samuel B. Grant 

Hatchet Representative . Archie D. Carr 

Student Council Representative .... Stewart Mudd 






































































































































r_ 




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1 


NURSES 



Faculty 


Julia C. Stimson, R.N. 


Head of the Department of Nursing and 
Social Service, Superintendent of Nurses 


Helen Lillian Bridge, R.N. 
Bess Mount, R.N. 

Vida Nevison, R.N. 

Naomi Skogberg, R.N. . 
Betty I. Hinds, R.N. . 
Candice Monfort, R.N. 


Assistant Superintendent of Nurses 
Second Assistant Superintendent of Nurses 
Third Assistant Superintendent 
Night Superintendent of Ahtrses 
Supervisor of the Private Patients’ Pavilion 


Assistant Superintendent of Nurses (for 
St. Louis Children’s Hospital) 


Agnes O’Dea . 
Frances A. Dempsey 


Resident Dietctian 
Resident Masseuse 


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The School for Nurses 




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Miss Ida Brossard 

Officers 


President 
Secretary 
Treasurer 


Student Council Representatives . 


Ida Brossard 
Ursula May Johnson 
Mary C. Reynolds 
Grace Bohnhardt 
Edith P. Harris 
Geraldine Peel 
Mary C. Pulley 


Page One Hundred Eleven 





































































































































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Erba Dili.man . 


Sailor Springs, Ills. 


y 


Glass Secretary (1); Awarded Alumnae Prize, 
’16; Hatchet Representative (1). 


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M. E. Elwee .St. Louis, Mo. 


■ 


:s. 


Margaret Helene Flynn . New York City, N. Y. 


Janet Cunningham Ford . 

Council Representative (1). 


Carthage, Mo. 


.8 


Marie Garrison 


Fairfield, Ills. 



Page One Hundred Fourteen 
































































Lhma B. Kennkrly 


Lexington, Mo 




Byrne Kikth 


St. Louis, Mo. 




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Alta Gladys Kindell 


I ronton, Mo 


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Nancy G. Lawler 


Mad ford, Ore 


Bkthene D. McKovvn 


Makanda, Ills 


Page One Hundred Sixteen 





































































































































The 


School for 


Nurses 



The Intermediate Nurses Class of 1918 



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Members 


Ruth Averttt 
Ruth M. Boland 
Blanche Bridger 
Mariana La Rue Cravens 
Pauline Cook 
Laura Franklin 
Mabel Fuson 
Helen M. Gist 
Anna Hall 
Sara G. Hall 
Helen R. Harrison 
Edna E. Hunt 
Gertrude Hufschmidt 
Merle R. Johnston 


Helen F. Lanham 
Victoria May 

Katherine O’Dile McCormick 

Anna L. Page 

Alvira C. Phillips 

Gladys Regnier 

Mary M. Reynolds 

Caroline E. Schultes 

Helen Smith 

Minnola Stallings 

Thelma J. Tibbs 

Benta Whitaker 

Velda J. Wilson 

Mae Wright 


Page Otic Hundred Twenty 



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Miss Caroline Turner 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary . 

Treasurer . 


Caroline Turner 
Elsie Edmonson 
Ruth Tolley 
Eleanor Case 


Page One Hundred Twenty-one 


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The Junior Nurses Class of 1919 


Members 


Alma Jean Appel 
Marguerite Brennan 
Lola Breitenstein 
Laura Caples 
Eleanor Case 
Mary Carnahan 
Jessie Clem 
Georgia Coleman 
Caroline Duffield 
Elsie Edmonson 
Roldade Ei.drf.d 
Louise Finneli. 
Margaret Finnell 
Florence Foreman 
Louise Gartjser 
Eula Inlow 


Agnes Jones 


Edna Klotz 
Elsie Mombercer 
Irene Peach 
Alice Porter 
Polly Powell 
Mary Roux 
Fern Rusk 
Natalie Salls 
Hazel Southard 
Lauda Stein 
Mabel Skaggs 
Velma Sutherland 
Ruth Tolley 
Caroline Turner 
Lucy Tuttle 
Laura Willis 


Page One Hundred Twenty-two 

£ 







































































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John Hanger Kennedy, D.D.S., M.D. 


^ 1 OHN HANGER KENNERLY, Dean of the Faculty of the Dental School, and 
Professor of Clinical Dentistry; Member and Ex-President of Missouri State 
Dental Association; Member and Ex-President of the St. Louis Dental Society; 
Member of the National Dental Association; Ex-President and Ex-Secretary of the 
National Association of Dental Faculties; Member of the Central District Dental 
Society of Missouri; Corresponding Member of the Illinois State Dental Association; 
Ex-President of the Institute of Dental Pedagogies; Delta Sigma Delta. 


? I 


Page One Hundred Twenty-four 


























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"FACULTY* 


Dental Faculty 


John Hanger Kennerly, D.D.S., M.D. 

Walter Manny Bartlett, D.D.S. 

Benno Edward Lischer, D.M.D. . 
Bland Nixon Pippin, D.M.D. 

Oliver Howard Campbell, M.D. . 
Vilray Papin Blair, A.M., M.D. 
Jerome Epstein Cook, M.D. . 

James Alexander Brown, D.D.S. 
Ewing Paul Brady, D.D.S. . 

Marsh Pitzman, M.D. . 

Jesse Duncan White, D.M.D. . 

Louis George Neuhoff, D.D.S. . 

John Richard Pendleton, D.D.S. 
Fred John Brockman, D.D.S. 

Walter Fritz Neuhoff 
Frank Henry Foerster, D.D.S. 

John Jackson Berry, D.D.S. 

George Emir Morgan, D.D.S. 

Edgar Hayden Keys, D.D.S. 

Harry Moll Fisher, D.M.D. 

Otto William Brandhorst, D.D.S. 
Ellis Fischel, M.D. 

Ludwig Orlando Muench, A.B., M.D 
Robert Yin yard, M.D. . 


Materia Mcdica, 
and Therapeutics 


Professor of Clinical Dentistry and History 
and Economics of Dentistry, and Dean 
of the Dental School 

Secretary and Professor of Prosthetic 
Dentistry 

Professor of Orthodontics 
Professor of Operative Dentistry 
Professor of Physiology 
Professor of Oral Surgery 
Professor of Bacteriology and General 
Pathology 

Professor of Histology 
Professor of Chemistry, 

Metallurgy, Pathology 
Professor of Anatomy 
Associate Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry 
and Lecturer on Croum and Bridge Work 
and Porcelain Art 

Associate Professor of Dental Anatomy and 
Instructor in Technic 
Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry 
Instructor in Oral Dentistry 
Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry 
Instructor in Prosthetic Technic 
Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry 
Clinical Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry 
Lecturer on Oral Hygiene 
Lecturer on Anaesthetics and Extraction 
Assistant in Histology 
Assistant in Anatomy 
Assistant in Pathology 
Assistant i)i Anatomy 







































































































































































































Fred Lester Edele 

Class Treasurer (1). 


Missouri 


Faris Clyton Elzea, A.SA 


Missouri 


Walter Jacob Faber, S.'I'.T. 


Illinois 


John Marion Fleming 
Class Baseball (2). 


Missouri 


Edward T. Gallagher, ASA 


Illinois 


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Earl Neal Henderson, 
Band (1, 2, 3). 




Illinois 


Leonard J. Hitz, S.'I'.'l’. 


Kansas 


Robert Leighton Howell, Z.'K'I’. 


Missouri 


J. Albert Jacobsmeyer, A.2.A. . . Missouri 

Senior Hatchet Representative; Class Vice-Presi¬ 
dent (1). 


Missouri 




William Katz 


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Page One Hundred Thirty-one 

































Paul I. Kriece, A.2.A. 


Missouri 


Roy L. Martin .Illinois 

Treasurer, Student Council, Dent. Dept. (1). 


Clifford Gordon Maxwell, 2.'i'.'l>. 

Class President (1); Member Student 
(3). 


Illinois 

Council 


Porter Hugh Miller, . . . Missouri 


F. D. Pendleton, S.¥.*.Missouri 

Secretary Senior Class (3). 


Page One Hundred Thirty-two 




























9 



Edgar Byron Ratliff 


Illinois 


Louis Huber Rf.nfron, A.2A 
Student Band (1, 2, 3). 


Missouri 


Amos H. Rode, A-A 


Illinois 


Barney M. Russell, E.'I'/L 
Class President (2). 


Missouri 


Missouri 


H. R. Shanley, a.'K'I’. 
Class President (3) 


Page One Hundred Thirty-three 











































George Robert Taylor, A.2.A. . . . Missouri 

Secretary, Student Body (2) ; Vice-President, 
Senior Class (3); Class Baseball (2). 


Oswald William Thumser, A.2.A 
Class Baseball (1, 2). 


Missouri 


Gustav H. Volmer 


Missouri 


George Salling Westfall . 
Class Treasurer (2, 3). 


Missouri 


Walter Laurence White, S.-b.'l'. . 
Class Secretary (1, 2). 


Illinois 


t ? 

Page One Hundred Thirty-four 11 

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The Senior Dental Class of 


Page C 































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11 


Wycliffe Everett Kiing 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary . 

Treasurer . 
Sergeant-at-Arms 
Hatchet Representative 

Page One Hundred Thirty-seven 


Wycukfe Everett Kling 
Carl Julius Beinker 
Alvin- Vernette Sanders 
Irvin John Kehr 
James D. Nelson 
Walter Louis Buck 



. • • ... 








































Members 


John Marvin Beard 
Card Julius Beinker 
Emphy Benvvay 
James Loy Bowman 
Harold Hyde Brum mall 
Francis Joseph Brandenburg, A.B 
George Breiiall 
Walter Louis Buck 
Harry Alger Burns 
Grover Clay 

Charles Raymond Clifford 
Leonard Francis Connell 
Charles Herbert Dean 
Bf.rnis Eugene Dickson 
Erwin Charles Elsner 
Howard Freshour 
Bertram Edmund Gilster 
Moses Glassman 
George Pertle Guibor 
Ralph Stoddard Hall 
James E. Harding 
George Henry Herbert 
Walter Herman Heseman 
Jacob Oscar Hitz 
Thomas Ray Hollinshead 

Jack 


Irvin John Kehr 
Wycmffe Everett Kling 
Robert Fern Lentz, B.S. 

Hidey Pratt Loudermilk 
James Morton Moore 
James D. Nelson 
Harry Oksner 
Roy Clayton Parkhill 
Lyle Donovan Perry 
Evan William Petty 
Lizzie Rembert Powell 
Calvin A. Reibert 
Elmer Reising 
Alvin Vernette Sanders 
Arthur John Schaub, Jr. 
Lawrence Andrew Snavely 
Larkin Ei.dridge Stark 
Edward Louis Stroh 
William Stroh 
Wesley Henry Tempel 
Robert Jasper Thogmorton 
Seth Cecil Thomas 
Thurlo Thompson Weir 
Walter William Wieman 
Samuel Frederick Wilmesherr 


Page One Hundred Thirty-eight 












































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FRESHMAN* 



Edward Alfred Marquard 

Officers 

President .Edward Alfred Marquard 

Vice-President .Samuel Nelson Dalby 

Secretary .Leslie Charles Hilderbrand 

Treasurer .George Henry VanDusen 

Sergeant-at-Arms .Loren O. Newport 

Hatchet Representative .Clarence William Koch 

Page One Hundred Thirty-nine 




• • '• . • • S.'s. .. 































The Dental School 


Freshman Dental Class 



Members 


Alfred Davis Barnett 
Carl Joshua Benning 
John Blair 
Norman Porter Brown 
George Adolph Clipner 
John Francis Conroy 
Archie Donald Cooper 
Elmer Nesbert Cox 
Samuel Nelson Dalp.y 
Scott McKinley Davidson 
Fred Elmore 

George Lewis Fearheiley 
Sylvester Edward Fendler 
Edward Harold Fishgall 
William Lloyd Glenn 
Robert Monroe Harlan 
Vern Lester Heath 
Leslie Charles Hilderbrand 
Frank G. Kavanaugh 
Paul A. Keller 
Sam Kippel 

Clarence William Koch 
Leonard Henry Kohm 
William Joseph Kolb 
Fred Maupin Lavender 


Maurice London 
Harvey Joseph Long 
Stanley J. McCarthy 
James Martin McLellan 
Eugene Harold Mahle 
Edward Alfred Marquard 
Rolland Thomas Mathews 
Waldren Edward Meyer 
Adron Wiley Moore 
Denver Nance 
Loren O. Newport 
Alphonses Patrick O’Harf. 
Oliver Francis Orton 
Alvin Joseph Pesetke 
Christ William Pieper 
Frank Oviatt Raney 
Leo Woodruff Reid 
Arthur John Reimers 
John Jesse Rodiien 


Howell Franklin Shannon 
Mack Taylor 
William Clinton Travis 
George Henry Van Dusen 
Russell Charles Wheeler 
Joe Christopher Wieneke 
Launcelot Aubrey Williams 


Pane One Hundred Forty 























































































Art School 


Edmund Henry Wuerpel 

DMUND HENRY WUERPEL, Director of the School of Fine Arts; First 
Sellew Medal, Manual Training School; Secretary, 1891-1S93, and Honorary 

Member, 1894-, American Art Association, Paris; Recording Secretary, 

Paris Advisory Committee, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Member of Jury 
of Selection, American Section, Universal Exposition, Paris, 1900; Member of Jury 
of Selection and Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Active Member 
and Vice-President, 2x4 Club, 1895-1897; Silver Medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposi¬ 
tion, 1904: Silver Medal, Lewis and Clark Exposition, 1905; Member Conference of 
Cities Committee, and Program Committee, St. Louis Pageant, 1914; Member Advisory 
Committee of the Middle West, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915; Member Special 
Committee of Paintings of the Middle West. 


Page One Hundred Forty-two 

fl91 


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'''///////? 



The 

Edmund I-Ienry Wuerpel, Director 

Henrietta Ord Jones . 

Cordelia Taylor Baker 

Gustav von Schlegell . 

Victor S. Holm .... 
Fred G. Carpenter .... 
Charles F. Galt .... 
Leola Bullivant .... 
Philip H. Pratt .... 

Edna Rall. 


Faculty 

Lecturer and Instructor in Composition and 
Artistic Anatomy 

Instructor in Ceramic Decoration and Pot¬ 
tery 

Instructor in Bookbinding and Leather- 
work 

Instructor in Drawing, Painting and Mono¬ 
typing 

Instructor in Modeling 

Instructor in Drawing, Painting and Joinery 

Instructor in Antique 

Instructor in Metal Work 

Instructor in Decorative Design and In¬ 
terior Decoration 

Instructor in Saturday Drawing Class 


Page One Hundred Porty-tliree 











































































































Art Students 


Ruth Axtell, 

Myrle Benedict 
Gertrude Card 
Carl Chalfant 
George Herman Conrey 
Helen Cotesworth 
Beatrice Cragg 
Charles F. Dieckman 
Harry A. Doerr 
William L. Forrest 
Roberta Lee Francis 
Florence Irene French 
Lenora Gantner 
Anna Gifford 
William J. Givlin, Jr. 
Harriet Gross 
I-Iazei. Marie Hackman 
Edward Warren Hagee 
Elmer W. Hahn 
Norma Hains 
Winifred Lee Hamilton 
Erwin FIausladen 
Sidney Louise Hayden 
John M. Heller, Jr. 

Edith E. LIethcock 
Dorothy Hock ad ay 
Frances E. Holtzwart 
Dorothy Elizabeth Horton 
Frank Miller Hughes 
Etelka J. Janis 
Donald Johnson 
Eglantine Jordan 
Roderick Bannon Kenison 
Sarah Ktnealy 


Page One Hundred Porty-fivc 


Mathii.de Elizabeth Klotz 
Norma Kopp 
Helen Levi 
Herbert Lowmiller 
Zei.la Mahon 
Myra P. Marglous 
Lewis Victor Maynard 
Edith McCormack 
Eva Bell Mitchell 
Walter Moeiilemann 
Lucille Moore 
Frances Orrick 
James Almer Parker 
Edna Rall 
Virginia Ricketts 
Harry Rubin 
Berenice Schaub 
Clifford Schofield 
Albert Sparks 
William Stack 
Lillian Frances 
Annette Gernon 
Lola Tate 
Berenice Todd 
Edna A. Toenges 
Roby Mental Tuck 
Morris J. Vickers 

H EN 1( I ETTA W A11 LF.RT 

Lucille Wai.d 

Gertrude Werner 

Edna Wider 

Helen Lydia Williams 

James Horton Windmueller 

Robert C. Wright 



Stein hoff 
Stevens 



































The School of Fine Arts 

HAT is the significance of the School of Fine Arts? Is the 
Art School as worthy a department of the University as 
any other of its various branches, and if so, what is its 
particular merit? 

Since prehistoric times, Art has ever been, not only 
the expression of the individual, but the epitome of the 
race of which he was a member and the period to which 
he belonged. Owing to this fact our judgment of the culture attained 
in any era, is based entirely upon the quality of its artistic achievements. 

Viewed in this light, the responsibility of the School of Fine Arts 
is a very unique and a most serious one. It should give a great deal of 
satisfaction to anyone who terms himself in the least degree cultivated 
to know that in a building that cannot be truthfully designated as rain¬ 
proof, and working with inadequate equipment under all manner of 
discouraging conditions, there is an earnest and determined body who 
uphold standards of excellence as high as any in this country. Perhaps 
this statement seems unbelievable. One has but to see the exhibitions 
of work done in various other Art Schools to appreciate its veracity. 

The teaching corps is composed of men who fully measure up to 
all requirements and their ability both as artists and instructors is 
indeed above any but the most expert criticism. They are indeed to the 
students a source of inspiration and stimulation to sincere and serious 
endeavor. 

Among those who received their early training at the St. Louis 
School of Fine Arts are a large number of the strongest and most suc¬ 
cessful painters that this country has ever had, and if the existence of 
Washington University is known in places and among people with 
whom culture and refinement is paramount, it is due largely to the ac¬ 
complishments of these men. D. S. J. 

Art School Honors 

Awards Given June, 1916 

For work in Black and White, a Bronze medal to Harry A. Doerr and Honorable 
Mention to Dorothy Hockaday. 

For work in Color, a Silver medal to John M. Heller, Jr., and Honorable Mention 
to Edna A. Toenges. 

For work in Illustration, a Silver medal to Louise Homever, a Bronze medal to 
Elmer W. Hahn and Honorable Mention to Horace Graf and Gaston Donohoe. 

For work in the Sketch class, Honorable Mention to Walter D. Thomas and 
Honorable Mention to Harland Frazer. 

For work in Sculpture, a Bronze medal to Harry Rubin and Honorable Mention 
to Edith E. Hethcock. 

For Craft work, Honorable Mention to Lillian Constance Glaser and Honorable 
Mention to Bertha N. Lawrence. 

The Wavman Crow medal was awarded to Nina Caroline Floyd. 

Page One Hundred Forty-six 

<<: 


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Shaw School of Botany 



George Thomas Moore, A.M., Ph.D. 


e EORGE 1 HOMAS MOORE. Director of the Henry Shaw School of Botany 
B.S., Wabash, 1894: A.B.. Harvard, 1895, A.M., 1896, Ph.D., 1900; Assistant 
Cryptogamic Laboratory, Harvard, 1897-1899; Instructor in Cryptogamic Botany, 
Radchffe, 1898-1899: in charge Botanical Department, Dartmouth, 1899-1901 - 
Physiologist and Algologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S. Department of Agri¬ 
culture, 1901-1902; in charge of Laboratory, Plant Physiology, 1902-05- Professor of 
Plant Physiology and Applied Botany, Henry Shaw School of Botany; Plant Physi¬ 
ologist, Missouri Botanical Garden, 1909-1912; Engelman Professor of Botany 
Washington University; Director, Henry Shaw School of Botany; Director. Missouri 

Botanical Garden, 1912-; Instructor Cryptogamic Botany, Marine Biological 

Laboratory, 1896-1907; Head of the Department of Botany, 1907: Lecturer “Con¬ 
tamination of Water Supplies,” Thayer School of Engineering, 1900-1902; “Economic 
Botany,” Dartmouth, 1901-1902; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement 

of Science; Secretary, Botanical Society of America, 1910-; President, Engelman 

Botany Club, 1912-; President, St. Louis Biological Club, 1912; Member of 

Society of Bacteriologists: Philosophical Society; Washington Academy of Science- 
St. Louis Academy of Science: Published “On the Contamination of Water Supplies 
by Algae," “The Fixation of Free Nitrogen by Root Nodule Organisms,” "Morphology 
and Physiology of the Algae.” 


Page One Hundred Forty-eight 


.t. i A. „• .* i r t V.V 
























mm 


FACVLTY of the 
ACHOOD f tOTANY 


F. R.L'. 


i 

!! 

I 

If 

11 

i V. 


The Faculty 


George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. . 

Benjamin Minge Duggar, Ph.D. 
Jesse More Greenman, Ph.D. . 
Edward Angus Burt, Ph.D. . 
Joseph Warren Severy, A.B. . 
Harry Milliken Jennison, A.M. 


Engelman Professor of Botany and Dean 
of the Henry Shaw School of Botany 

Professor of Plant Physiology 
Associate Professor of Botany 
Associate Professor of Botany 
Teaching Fellow in Botany 
Assistant in Botany 


11 


li 

11 


Student Members 


Walter W. Bonns, B.S. 
Carroll W. Dodge, A.M. 
Lucy D. Foote, A.M. 
George W. Freiberg, B.S. 


Ira C. Hoffman, M.S. 
Harry M. Jennison, A.M. 
Alexander Lurie, B.S. 
David C. Neal, A.M. 


Louis J. Pessin, B.S. 
Alice Pickel, A.B. 
Walter S. Reeves, B.S. 
Henry Schmitz, M.S. 


J. Warren Severy, A.B. 


Sanford M. Zeller, A.M. 



Page One Hundred Forty-nine 













School of Bota 


General Statement 


HE School of Botany was established as a part of Wash¬ 
ington University in 1885 as the result of an offer by 
Mr. Henry Shaw, of St. Louis, to endow a department 
devoted to botanical instruction and research. It was 
suggested that the school be placed in such relation with 
the Missouri Botanical Garden as to secure to the 
professors and students the most efficient results. In 


accepting the proposal of Mr. Shaw, the corporation named the depart¬ 
ment the Henry Shaw School of Botany and established a professorship 
of botany therein, to be known as the Engelmann professorship, in honor 
of Dr. George Engelmann. 

Laboratories for undergraduate instruction are maintained at the 
University and the officers of instruction there are in close touch with 
the Garden, the extensive facilities of which are most important in 
many phases of the work. Graduate instruction is given at the Missouri 
Botanical Garden, where are found an excellent library of 32,785 bound 
volumes and 42,530 pamphlets, together with 112 volumes of very 
valuable manuscript; an extensive herbarium, including all classes of 
plants, contains 700,000 mounted specimens; and a new and well- 
equipped fire-proof laboratory. 


li 


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■ii c.v.S 























































































































































Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary . 

Treasurer . 


Logan Hackman 
John Moll 
Lee Harrison 
Prof. F. A. Berger 


Athletic Council 


Faculty 


Prof. J. L. Van Ornum 
Dr. Wm. F. Gephart 


Dr. J. D. White 
Dr. W. P. Edmunds 


Prof. F. A. Berger 

Alumnus 
Dr. H. G. Lund 

Students 


Urban Busier 
Logan Hackman 
Lee Harrison, Jr. 


Page One Hundred Fifty-one 

IfSjg 


Meredith Jones 
John Moll 
Richard Stout 






























v • i r * '• 

• -V/r.Vv-X 





John Brady, Track, 3 

Emphy Benway, Football, 1 ; Basket-ball, 1 

Frank Brim, Track, 2 

Urban Busier, Football, 3 

Alfred Caffee, Football, 2 

Guy Calloway, Football, 1 

Thomas Dawson, Football, 1 

Henry Duncker, Basket-ball, 1 

Fred Finley, Track, 1 

Fred Forlsch, Football, 1 

John Grossman, Football, 2 

Harold Harvey, Track, 2 

Carl Kamp, Basket-ball, 1 

Wycliffe Kling, Football, 2 

Andrew Kurrus, Football, 1 

Claude McElwee, Basket-ball, 1 

Robert McRoberts, Football, 3 

Paul Marsh, Track, 1 

Jerome Meyer, Football, 3 

Wayne Miller, Basket-ball, 3 

James Nelson, Football, 1 

Norman Pemberton, Football, 3: Track, 2 

Ray Peters, Football, 1 

Edgar Schwartzenbach, Football, 1 

Connor Shanley, Football, 1 

Paul Shepard, Track, 1 

Richard Stout, Football, 2; Track, 2; Basket-ball, 3 
Edwin Thomas, Basket-ball, 1 
Forest Wetzel, Football, 3 


Page One Hundred Fifty-two 
























.-.V-V.v. - • x.fJS+rj.rS.MAS.- 


Page One Hundred Pifty-threc 




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'/////////////////////////////////. ■/. 



Athletics 



Officers 


Captain 
Manager . 

Assistant Managers 


Urban J. Busier, ’17 
Meredith Jones, ’17 

Sylvester Horn, ’18 
Dwight Harper, ’18 


Coach 

Assistant Coaches 


Dr. W. P. Edmunds 
Bindley Milford, ’15 
Mr. Hagar 
Mr. Pratt 
Mr. Grogan 


The Team 


Urban J. Busier 
Wycliffe E. Kling 
Fred R. Foelsch 
Connor Shanley 
Jerome Meyer 
Guy D. Callaway 
Raymond YV. Peters 
Francis R. Stout 
Robert H. McRoberts 


John Grossman 
Forest B. Wetzel 
Andrew W. Kurrus 
Alfred H. Caffee 
Thomas E. Dawson 
Edgar Schwartzenbach 
Harry G. Reicitard 
Emphy Benway 
James D. Nelson 


Record of Games 


October 

7. 

Washington 

October 

14. 

Washington 

October 

21. 

Washington 

October 

28. 

Washington 

November 

4. 

Washington 

November 

11. 

Washington 

November 

30. 

Washington 


1911— Washington 

1912— Washington 

1913— Washington 

1914— Washington 

1915— Washington 

1916— Washington 


1-1—Rose Polytechnic 0 
0—Missouri 13 
0—Drake 13 


Francis Field 
Columbia. Mo. 
Francis Field 


7—Rolla 6 


Francis Field 


7—Michigan 

66 . . . 

Ann Arbor, Mich. 

7—Knox 7 


Francis Field 


9—St. Louis 

u. o '. 

Francis Field 


107 

Opponents 


28 

162 

Opponents 


111 

64 

Opponents 


164 

170 

Opponents 


87 

112 

Opponents 


66 

44 

Opponents 


105 


Page One Hundred Fifty-five 














































































































































W 1 * vV* j **r*-t» Al* •.*rtl«W\*. V 


V*>^, »>i«^W^AW*l**MiV - V 1 




1916 W Football Men 


Urban Busiek, Captain. 
Right Tackle, Varsity 3. 
Height, 5 ft. 11 in.; Age, 
Weight, 165. 


WyclilTe Kling, Captain-Elect. 
I,eft End, Varsity 2. 

Height, 6 ft. 1 in.; Age, 21. 
Weight, 162. 


Robert McRoberts. 
Quarterback, Varsity 3. 
Height, 6 ft.; Age, 21. 
Weight. ISO. 


Jerome Meyer. 

Right End and Quarterback, 
Varsity 3. 

Height, 5 ft. 9 in.; Age, 23. 
Weight, 160. 


Forest Wetzel. 

Center, Varsity 3. 

Height, 5 ft. 11% in.; Age, 20. 
Weight, 179. 


John Grossman. 

I-eft Guard and Right Tackle, 
Varsity 2. 

Height, 6 ft.; Age, 20. 

Weight, 181. 


Alfred Caffee. 

Right End. Varsity 2. 
Height, 5 ft. 6 in.: Age, 
Weight, 145. 


Ed. Schwartzenbach. 

Right Halfback, Varsity 2. 
23. Height, 5 ft. 5 in.; Age, 22. 
Weight, 125. 


Dick Stout. 

Left Halfback, Varsity 2. 
Height, 5 ft. 11% in.; Age, 21. 
Weight, 142. 

Page One Hundred Sixty 


















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25 


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Emphy Benway. 
Quarterback, Varsity 1. 
Height, 5 ft. 5 in; Age, 22 
Weight, 132. 


Conner Shanley. 

Left Halfback and Pullback, 
Varsity 1. 

Height, 5 ft. 11 in.; Age, 22. 
Weight, 1S5. 


Andrew Kurrus. 

Right Guard and Right Tackle, 
Varsity 1. 

Height, 5 ft. 11 in.; Age, 20. 
Weight, 168. 


Fred Foelsch. 

Fullback and Right Tackle, 
Varsity 1. 

Height, 6 ft. 1 in.; Age, 21. 


Guy Calloway. 

Left Tackle, Varsity 1. 
Height, 5 ft. 11 in.; Age, 26. 
Weight, 173. 


Ray Peters. 

Left Guard, Varsity 2. 
Height, 5 ft. 8 in.; Age, 20. 
Weight, 178. 


Harry Reichard. 
Quarterback and Halfback, 
Varsity 1. 

Height, 5 ft. 5 in.; Age, 19. 
Weight, 132. 


Tom Dawson. 

Halfback and Fullback, 
Varsity 1. 

Height. 6 ft.; Age, 19. 
Weight, 175. 


2 * 


James Nelson. 

Right Tackle, Varsity 1. 
Height, 6 ft. 1 in.; Age. 21. 
Weight, 172. 


Page One Hundred Sixty-one 


















I 

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If 

If 

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MERE is many a slip between the cup and the lip.” That 
is an old, old saying, but it is just as true now as when 
Hannibal crossed the Alps. It looked like 1916 would see 
the Piker football cup get to the lip, but here is where 
the slip comes in. Washington was doped to have the 
best team in its history, but somehow it could not get 
itself hooked up with success. It happened that several 
opponents of the Pikers also had their best team in years, and it also 
happened that “Doc” Edmunds was rarely able to put his best team in 
the field intact. Under the handicap of numerous and costly injuries 
and the unforseen lack of a natural quarterback, the Coach found it a 
hard task to get his machine to running smoothly, and he succeeded in 
doing so only before the St. Louis game. But remember that the team 
which held the Valley champions to thirteen points when she had her 
strongest team in the field, and which crosses the inviolate Michigan 
goal line could only have been Washington's best team. 

Washington opened the season on Francis Field by winning from 
Rose Polytechnic of Terre Haute in a hard fought game, score 14 to 0. 
A very warm day and a dusty field made conditions very unfavorable 
for football, consequently no real line could be gotten on the team. The 
game as a whole was very slow, much time being taken out by both 
sides. The first half was very even and ended with no score on either 
side, but in the second half the speed of “Pete” Pemberton won the day. 
Pemberton scored two touchdowns, one on a 95 yard dash, after inter- 



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r'J-‘ v•••»*•.>/ 

















Athletics 


cepting a Poly pass, and the other on a beautiful 50 yard dash around 
end. Mark one game up for “Pete.” 

Four hundred Piker rooters saw the rampant Missouri Tigers score 
a hard I ought victory over the Pikers, 13 to 0. The game was a 
thriller in every respect; the stubborn defense of the Pikers in the 
shadow of their goal posts, Dawson’s brilliant kicks at the moment they 
could do the most possible good, and the irresistible interference of the 
I igers which enabled their backs to make many long runs, all kept the 
rooters in a fever heat throughout the contest. Four times the Tigers 
rushed the ball to our goal line, and each time the Piker line held before 
Stankowski wiggled over in the second quarter. From then on it was 
a battle royal until the last quarter was waning when Stankowski’s 
second touchdown removed all hope of a victory. The great playing 
of "Doc’ Caffee at end and "Fritz" Foelsch at guard was the outstanding 
feature of Washington’s great defense. 

Nobody will admit that Drake possessed as strong an eleven as 
Missouri, yet Drake beat us by the same score the following Saturday. 
-Maybe the carburetor was not getting enough gas, or the machine 
needed oiling, or maybe the boys just had an off day. Somehow our 
boy r s could not make any headway past the middle of the field, while on 
two occasions the Drake backs broke loose and rushed the ball the length 
of the field for touchdowns. At any rate Drake beat us fair and square 
on our own field. 

hollowing the Drake game, "Doc" Edmunds juggled his men with 
reckless abandon until the following Saturday an entirely rearranged 
team took the field against Rolia. Teamwork was lacking to a large 
degree but by individual efforts the Miners were downed in a close game, 
score 7 to ti. In the second quarter Tom Dawson smashed through 
the line for six points, and Kling added the winning margin. Rolla 
scored in the third period on a series of well executed passes, the last 
of which resulted in a touchdown. Goal was missed. "Dick" Stout de¬ 
spite a weak knee played a brilliant game at half for the Pikers, his 
many pretty runs keeping the ball in Rolla’s territory. He was ably 
seconded by Schwartzenbach, who showed a marked ability to follow 
his interference. 

Three hundred men and sixty women, all rooters, journeyed to Ann 
Arbor on a special train to see Washington break into the “big league” 
against the mighty Wolverines. Yes, we were walloped good and proper 
as the f»G to 7 score would indicate, but it was worth it. Did not “Buddy” 
Kling politely grab an intended forward pass out of a Michigander’s 
hands and outrun him 15 yards for a touchdown? lie did; aiid every 
Piker rooter suffered a five minutes’ stroke of insanity. To recount the 
game would be useless; Michigan was superior in weight, in strength, 
in speed, in experience and in everything except fight and there we had 
them. Every Piker fought to the last ditch and were rewarded by seven 
points. Busiek, at tackle, played a beautiful game, outcharging his 
opponent and continually breaking through for tackles behind the 
line. Anyway, we saw Ann Arbor, we saw “Mauley,” we saw the 
Pikers fight and score and we had a lieluva time. 

Knox came to town just a trifle too quick after the Michigan battle. 

Page One Hundred Sixty-three 













Our men were just beginning to breathe easily when Knox’s best team 
in years held us to a 7-7 tie game. Fumbles were the cause of all our 
troubles; a fumble gave Knox a touchdown and many fumbles spoiled 
innumerable opportunities to score. Knox also fumbled quite a bit but 
every time a Knox man recovered. There you are, and every time we 
fumbled a Knox man got the ball. Bridgcford was a lucky Knox man 
to pick up a fumble on his ten yard line and gallop all the way for a 
touchdown. The Pikers scored just before the half ended by a series of 
dashing runs by Schwartzenbach and a double pass to Kling over the 
goal line. 

The climax of the season came on November 30, alias Turkey Day, 
when Washington administered the third straight defeat to St. Louis 
University. It was a game in which everything was at stake for both 
teams and the score, 9 to 0, will indicate that it was the hardest fought 
battle of the year. The Pikers for the lirst time since the Missouri 
game showed a smooth running, finely conditioned machine which was 
powerful to score a touchdown and a goal from the field and to hold the 
Billikens in check the only time they became dangerous. The outstand¬ 
ing feature of the game was the all-round play of retiring Captain 
Busiek. “Bon” not only smashed the opposing line at will on the de¬ 
fense, but scored the lone touchdown after gaining a hundred yards 
himself in the fourth quarter. “Buddy” Kling, Captain for 1917, more 
than earned that honor by his brilliant defensive play and a beautiful 
field goal from the 38 yard line. More than ten thousand rooters packed 
Francis Field. 



Page One Hundred Sixty-four 






































Fhe 1917 Basketball Team 


Friecke (Coach) McEKvce Duncker Thomas Kling H. Miller 
Kamp W. Miller Stout (Capt.) Ben way 


Page One Hundred Sixty-six 




AW 




















December 

23 

Washington 

Schedule and Scores 

78 — Jefferson Barracks 17 . 

Barracks 

January 

1 

Washington 

21—C. A. C. 

45 . 

. C. A. C. 

January 

12 

Washington 

27—C. A. C. 

23 . 

. Francis Gymnasium 

January 

18 

Washington 

22 — Missouri 

36 . 

Columbia, Mo. 

January 

19 

Washington 

20 — Missouri 

30 . 

. Columbia, Mo. 

February 

2 

Washington 

33-Rolla 

9 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

February 

3 

Washington 

27—Rolla 

11 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

February 

6 

Washington 

33 — St. Louis 

20 . 

. Francis Gymnasium 

February 

9 

Washington 

17 — Kansas Aggies 

34 . 

Manhattan, Kan. 

February 

10 

Washington 

17 — Kansas Aggies 

46 . 

Manhattan, Kan. 

February 

12 

Washington 

26 — Kansas 

34 . 

Lawrence, Kan. 

February 

13 

Washington 

25—Kansas 

33 . 

. Lawrence, Kan. 

Muegge’s Gymnasium 

February 

16 

Washington 

41—St. Louis U. 

24 . 

February 

23 

Washington 

23 — Kansas U. 

16 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

February 

24 

Washington 

19 — Kansas U. 

29 . 

. Francis Gymnasium 

March 

2 

Washington 

21—Kansas Aggies 

42 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

March 

3 

Washington 

20 — Kansas Aggies 

33 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

March 

8 

Washington 

19 — Missouri 

23 . 

Francis Gymnasium 

March 

9 

Washington 

22 — Missouri 

31 . 

. Francis Gymnasium 



511 

538 



Summary of Games 

Won 7; Lost 12 


Page One Hundred Sixty-seven 


























Basketball, Season 1917 


HE 191(i Basketball Season may be classed neither as a 
success, nor a failure. True the Pikers won but one out 
of twelve games played in the Conference, but on the 
other hand they won the city collegiate championship for 
the third straight time from St. Louis U; and defeated the 
C. A. C. quintet, one of the best teams in this section. 
And it must be remembered that Fricke’s men were con¬ 


tinually handicapped by serious injuries at most critical times, a lack of 
substitutes of high caliber; and what is probably most potent, a “green” 
team. The Pikers, nevertheless, were always a dangerous opponent, 
and never failed to put up a hard scrap, being usually deprived of the 
fruits of victory by superior stamina in the final moments of play. 


The two St. Louis U. games were won in handy fashion. The first 


game at Francis Gymnasium resulted in victory by a score of 33 to 20, 
due to the great work of Duncker, who caged eight field goals. The 
second game at Muegge’s was a rough and tumble affair with the 
Pikers completely outplaying their opponents by a score of 41 to 24. 

Rolla called for two games at Francis Gymnasium and took home 
the short end of both, 33 to 9 and 27 to 11. The Pikers were too much 
for the inexperienced Miners, only a tendency to loaf preventing two 
overwhelming scores. 

The first game of the season resulted in a defeat at the hands of 
C. A. C. by a score of 45 to 21. The Tangled C men were too strong 


Page One Hundred Sixty-eight 


if 


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Athletics 


and experienced for their "green” rivals, consequently the defeat. The 
bright spot of the game was Kamp’s guarding of Von Dach and the all¬ 
round play of centerman, Thomas. The Pikers gained ample revenge 
two weeks later by whipping the same team at Francis Gym in the 
best and most exciting game of the season. The Piker guarding was 
so close that C. A. C. obtained only five baskets, thirteen fouls by 
Hodge alone keeping them in the running. 

Washington lost the first two encounters to Missouri because of a 
bad attack of stage fright. 

All hopes of success on the trip to Lawrence and Manhattan were 
ruined by the injury to Kamp, and the consequent disruption of team 
play when "Toddy’s” knee cracked the first night against the Aggies, the 
Piker defense went to pieces, giving the Aggies two easy games, 34 to 
17, and 46 to 17. At Kansas a braver stand was made, but the reserve 
strength was not there and the result was two more defeats. 

The first game at home resulted in a victory over Kansas, 23 to 16. 
The next night saw Kansas turn the tables, overwhelming our exhausted 
boys in the last minutes of play. 

The Pikers played real basketball against the Aggies, but it might 
be added that the Aggies played considerable ball themselves. Although 
defeated the Pikers fought to the last ditch and gave the clean playing 
Farmers a great run for their money. Only the fact that they were 
playing champions, deprived the Piker brand of play from winning. 

The two final games against Missouri were a combination of basket 
ball-wrestling-football. For excitement these games could not be beaten. 
The Tigers nosed out a 23 to 19 victory the first night due to the great 
work of Williams, who scored seventeen points. The second night’s 
play resulted in a 31 to 22 defeat for the Pikers, but it might be added 
that a student of Missouri U. was refereeing, the Tigers refusing to play 
if he did not referee. This game was featured by the brilliant guarding 
of Williams by Kamp, each getting two field goals. The games were 
reple'e wPh circus shots by Benway, Duncker and Kamp. 



Page One Hundred Sixty-nine 










1917 Basketball Men 


Richard Stout, Captain. 
Age, 21; Years on Squad, 2. 
Weight, 140. 

Height, 5 ft. 11% in. 

Center. 


Carl O. Kamp, Captain-Elect. 
Age, 20; Years on Squad, 1. 
Weight, 140. 

Height, 5 ft. 7% in. 

Right Guard 


Wayne Miller. 

Age, 23; Years on Squad, 3 
Weight, 145. 

Height, 5 ft. 11 in. 

Left Guard. 


Edwin R. Thomas. 

Age. 21; Years on Squad, 1. 
Weight, ISO. 

Height, 6 ft. 3 % in. 

Center. 


Claude McElwee. 

Age, 23; Years on Squad. 1. 
Weight, 130. 

Height, 5 ft. in. 
Substitute. 


Henry P. Duncker. 

Age, 19; Years on Squad, 1. 
Weight, 160. 

Height, 6 ft. 1 in. 

Right Forward. 


Wycliffe E. Klmg. 

Age, 20; Years on Squad. 1. 
Weight, 165. 

Height, 6 ft. 2 in. 
Substitute. 


Empiiy Benway. 

Age, 22; Y'ears on Squad, 1. 
Weight, 130. 

Height. 5 ft. 5 in. 

Left Forward. 


Henry Miller. 

Age, 20; Years on Squad, 2. 
Weight, 140. 

Height, 5 ft. S!£ in. 
Substitute. 

Payc One Hundred Seventy 

5918! 
































Athletics 




TRACK 


nnn 












Page One Hundred Seventy-two || 

01 























Athletic 


Event 

100 Yd. Dash . 

220 Yd. Dash . 

440 Yd. Dash . 

880 Yd. Run . 

One Mile Run 
120 \d. High Hurdles 
220 Y'd. Low Hurdles 
Broad Jump . 

High Jump . 

Pole Vault . 

Shot Put 
Discus Throw 


Event 

100 Yd. Dash . 

220 Yd. Dash . 

440 Yd. Dash . 

880 Yd. Run . 

One Mile Run 
Two Mile Run 
120 Yd. High Hurdles 
220 Yd. Low Hurdles 
880 Yd. Relay 
Pole Vault 
Discus Hurl 
High Jump 
Shot Put 
Broad Jump 


Track Record 

Knox College vs. Washington U. 

May 6, 1916 


First 


Second 

Third 


Time 

Auhl 

(K) 

Havermole 

(K) Leuking 

(W) . 

:10% 

Aulil 

(K) 

Havermole 

(K) Pemberton 

(W) . 

:23% 

Havermole 

(K) 

Leuking 

(W) Leopold 

(W) . 

:54 

Brady 

(W) 

Washburn 

(K) Temple 

(IC) . 

2:04 

Temple 

(K) 

Sharp 

(W) Geppert 

(W) . 

4:53% 

Marsh 

(W) 

Crane 

(K) Phillips 

(K) . 

:17% 

Lee 

(K) 

Philips 

(K) Finley 

(W) . 

:27% 

Auhl 

(K) 

Shepherd 

(W) Lee 

(K) . 

. 20 ft. 9 in. 

Marsh 

(W) 

Stites 

(W) Doerhoff 

(K) . 

68% in. 

Bake 

(K) 

Marsh 

(W) Mitchell 

(W) . 

. 10 ft. 9 in. 

Bubb 

(W) 

Hachman 

(W) Crane 

(K) . 

35 ft. 10 in. 

Bubb 

(W) 

Hacliman 

(W) Larson 

(K) . 

106 ft. 6 in. 

Rolla School of Mines vs. 

Washington 

U. 



May 20, 1916 



Won 

by Rolla, 69 to 52 



First 


Second 


Third 


Time 

Imlay 

(R) 

Pemberton 

(W) 

McSorley 

(W) 

:10 

Imlay 

(R) 

Pemberton 

(W) 

Goodman 

(R) 

:22% 

Pemberton 

(W) 

Hem an 

(R) 

Harvey 

(W) 

:54% 

Brady 

(W) 

Neuman 

(W) 

Gill 

(R) 

2:09% 

Murphy 

(R) 

Leopold 

(W) 

Neuman 

(W) 

4:52% 

Murphy 

(R) 

Green 

(W1 

No third 


11:11% 

Stout 

(W) 

Kammerer 

(W) 

Scruby 

(R) 

:17% 

Brazil 

(R1 

Aid 

(R) 

Stout 

(W) 

. . :27 

Washington 


Rolla 


Mitchell 

(W) 

1:31% 

Scruby 

(R) 

Peterson 

(R) 

Hachman 

(W) 

. 10 ft. 6 in. 

Wilson 

(R) 

Bubb 

(W) 

Mitchell 

(W) 

100 ft. 

Scruby 

(R) 

Peterson 

fR) 

Hachman 

(W) 

67 in. 

Wilson 

(R) 

Imlay 

(R1 

Peterson 

(R) 

. 36 ft. 8 in. 

Imlay 

(R) 

McSorley 

(W) 



. 20 ft. 10% in. 


McKendree College vs. Illinois Normal vs. Washington U. 

May 13, 1916 



Won 

by Washington, 

86 to 25 to 5 



Event 

First 


Second 


Third 


Time 

100 Yd. Dash . 

Pemberton 

(W) 

McSorley 

(W) 

Boswell 

(N) 

:10% 

220 Yd. Dash . 

Pemberton 

(W) 

McSorley 

(W) 

Miller 

(McK) . 

:23 

440 Yd. Dash . 

Harvey 

(W) 

Moore. 

(McK) 

Boswell 

(N) . 

:54% 

♦880 Yd. Run . 

Brady 

(W) 

Rawlings (McK) 

W oods 

(McK) . 

2:02% 

One Mile Run 

Rawlings (McK) 

Leopold 

(W) 

Sharp 

(W) . 

4:35 

120 Yd. High Hurdles 

Marsh 

(W) 

Kammerer (W) 

Greer 

(McK) . 

:17 

220 Yd. Low Hurdles 

Finley 

(W) 

Leuking 

(W) 

Greer 

(McK) . 

:28 

Shot Put 

Bubb 

(W) 

Hachman 

(W) 

Taylor 

(N) . 

. 35 ft. 1 in. 

Discus Throw 

Bubb 

(W) 

Baxter 

(McK) 

Hachman 

(W) . 

. 95 ft. 6 in. 

High Jump . 

Marsh 

(W) 

Stites 

(W) 

Margrave 

(McK) . 

67 in. 

Pole Vault . 

Mitchell 

(W) 

Marsh 

(W) 

Britton 

(McK) . 

. 10 ft. 3 in. 

Broad Jump . 

Shepherd 

(W) 

Underwood (N) 

McSorley 

(W) . 

20 ft. 9% in. 

Javelin Throw 

Collord (McK) 

Berry 

(W) 

Bubb 

(W) . 

152 ft. 3 in. 


Totals: Washington, 86; McKendree, 25: Normal 5. 

♦Brady established a new Washington U. record in the 880 Yard Run by clipping two-fifths 
of a second off the former record of 2:02%. 

Page One Hundred Seventy-three 






























1916 Track Season 

ORE men responded to Coach Edmund’s call for track 
practice this spring than ever before. These men also 
came out regularly all during the season, and give promise 
of forming a highly successful track team next spring. 
The 1D16 season was a success, although the records may 
not seem to bear this statement out, because it brought 
out many good men with several years of competition left, 
and it stirred up a promising interest in track athletics. 

A Dual Meet with Knox College came on May 6tli, which did 
not result so favorably for Washington. Several of the men who were 
counted upon to score heavily failed signally and consequently Knox 
took home the long end of a 58 1-3 to 49 2-3 score. 

On May L3th, Washington easily captured a three-cornered meet 
from McKendree College and the Southern Illinois Normals. The 
feature of the meet were two splendid runs by Brady and Rawlings. 
Brady set a new Washington record in the half mile when he ran the 
distance in 2:02 2-5. 

Rolla won the dual meet on the following Saturday by a score of 
6!) to 52. While offering no alibis it must be said that we were without 
the services of Marsh and Stites, which reduced our possible total a 
good bit. The feature of the meet was the two hairline finishes of Imlay 
and Pemberton in the dashes. Each time, the speedy Miner beat “Pete” 
by an eyelash. 'Phis meet ended the 1916 track season at Washington. 

Washington loses such excellent men this year as Leuking, Bubb. 
Kammerer, Leopold, and Brady, all of whom have been hard and con¬ 
sistent workers on the track for the Myrtle and Maroon. 



Page One Hundred Seventy-four 





















Page One Hundred Seventy-five 




























Class Football 


Sophomore Football Team 


j « 




Freshman Football learn 


Page One Hundred Seventy-six 


m 
























A t h 1 e t 


Interclass Football, 1916 


Sophomores, 0 
Bryant 
Lindholm 
Douglas . 
Hastings . 
Korando . 

Neale 
Brooks, Millar 
Reichard, Brooks 

SUANLEY . 

Dawson . 
Foelsch 


Touchdown —Meyers 
Referee —Grogan 


Position 
Left End 
Left Tackle . 
Left Guard . 
Center . 

Right Guard 
Right Tackle 
Right End 
Quarter Back 
Left Half Back 
Right Half Back 
Full Back . 


Freshmen, 6 
McCallum 
Hausladen, Jackes 
V OSBURGH 

Berger 

Becker 

Nobise 

Stuart 

Webster 

CONZELMAN, MyERS 

Johnson 

Kremer 


'^//S/s/ss///////s/////////s///s//ss///s, 

1 

I 


U inf ire — Sch w artzenbach 
H eadlinesman — Kurrus 


Event 

100 Yd. Dash . 
220 Yd. Dash . 
440 Yd. Dash . 
880 Yd. Run . 
One Mile Run 
Two Mile Run 


High Jump . 
Discus Throw 
Shot Put 
Broad Jump . 
Pole Vault . 

Summary: 5 

men '19, 2 points. 


Time of quarters, 7 minutes. 

Interc 1 ass Track Meet 

April 28, 1916 
Won by Sophomores 


First 

Second 

Third 


Time 

Pemberton 

'17 McSorley 

'17 Wulfing 

’18 . 

:10% 

Pemberton 

T7 Wulfing 

’IS Burke 

’18 . 

:22% 

Leuking 

'16 Leopold 

’16 Harvey 

'18 . 

:54% 

Brady 

’16 Nenman 

’18 Kennedy 

’18 . 

2:05% 

Kelley 

'18 Sharp 

'18 Green 

’16 . 

5 :03 

Sharp 

’18 Werner 

T8 Skinner 

’16 . 

1 1 :40 

Marsh 

’18 Kammerer 

'16 Berry 

T6 . 

:17% 

Finley 

’18 Leuking 

’16 Berry 

’16 . 

:28 

Stitcs 

'17 Marsh 

’18 Reichard 

’19 . 

68 in. 

Bubb 

’16 Hackman 

'17 Foelsch 

’19 . 

107 ft. 

Bubb 

’16 Hackman 

’17 Berrv 

’16 . 

. 38 ft. 4 in. 

Shepherd 

’18 Pemberton 

'17 Finley 

’18 . 

. 19 ft. 5 in. 

Marsh 

’18 Mitchell 

’18 Pope 

’17 . 

. 10 ft. 3 in. 

mores ’18, 

54 points; Seniors ’16, 34 points: Juniors '17. 28 points; Fresh- 


Sophomores vs. Freshmen 

May 17, 1916 



Won 

by Sophomores, 63% to 52% 




Event 

First 

Second 

Third 


Time 


100 Yd. Dash . 

Reichard 

’19 Burke 

T8 Bartlett 

'18 . 


10% 

220 Yd. Dash . 

Reichard 

’19 Wulfing 

T9 Millar 

T9 . 


23% 

440 Yd. Dash . 

Bartlett 

’18 Burke 

T8 Finley 

’IS . 


56 

880 Yd. Run . 

Harvey 

’18 Kennedy 

’IS Driemeycr 

T9 . 

2 

18 

One Mile Run 

Kelley 

’18 Neuman 

T8 Bemvay 

T8 . 

5 

03 

Two Mile Run 

Sharp 

’IS Lyon 

T8 Blelock 

T9 . 

11 

30 

High Hurdles 

Walters 

’19 Lindholm 

T9 Finley 

'18 . 


18 

Low Hurdles 

Lindholm 

T9 Anderson 

T9 Walters 

T9 . 


29 

Shot Put 

Rowan 

T8 Kinsey 

T9 Dawson 

T9 . 

.’ 37 ft. 

4 in. 

Discus Throw 

Rowan 

’18 Frielingsdorf 

T9 Foelsch 

T9 . 

. 92 ft. 

High Jump . 

Walters 

T9 Rowan 

T8 ) 




Broad Jump . 

Burke 

’18 Bryant 

T9 > Tied 


61 in. 



Reichard 

T9 ) 






Finley 

T8 Frielingsdorf 

T9 . 

19 ft. 11 in. 

Note: Sophomores are not allowed to compete in 

their varsity events. 




Payc One Hundred Seventy-seven 


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Par/c Owe Hundred Seventy-eight 



















Athletics 

Interclass Basketball, 1916 

Teams 

Seniors 

Forwards 


W. Miller 
R. Jolley 

E. Benway 

J. Grossman 

McColley 

Rodden 

P. Johnson 

Russell 


E. Thomas, Center 
Guards 


R. Stout 


Juniors 

Forwards 

M. Lyon, Center 
Guards 

Sophomores 

Forwards 


E. SCHWARTZENBACH 


H. Miller 


J. Kelley 


A. Marquard, Center 
Guards 


PI. Duncker 


Sophomores, 1919 
Juniors, 1918 

Seniors, 1917 

Freshmen, 1920 


Juniors 

Freshmen 

Sophomores 

Freshmen 

Sophomores 

Juniors 


Page One Hundred Seventy-nine 



Freshmen 

Forwards 

C. Imse, Center 
Guards 


G. Fricke 


Giessow 


J. CONZELMAN 


Summary of Games 


17 

Freshmen 

4 

Seniors 

23 

Seniors 

8 

Sophomores 

23 

Juniors 

17 

Seniors 


















































2 2 




;• ? 




“Who hath seen her wave her hand? 
Or at the casement seen her stand?” 


Page One Hundred Eighty 









































































Women’s Athletic Association 



President ■ 
Vice-President 
Secretary . 
Treasurer . 
Director 


Evadne Aldf.n 
Margaret Amend 
Lucy Andrews 
Elizabeth Baker 
Helen Banister 
Martha Barkley 
Alice Barkhoefer 
Claire Berry 
Lucille Bishop 
Mary Blackburn 
Louise Breeding 
Jeanette Bkinkmann 
Frances Broermann 
Katherine Brookes 
Jean Brookes 
Dorothea Burbach 
Bessie Campbell 
Mildred Candy 
Elizabeth Chapin 
May Cornwall 
Helen Crawford 
Helen Cuppaidge 
Clara Louise Danglade 
Vera Daurenheim 
Emily Daurenheim 
Esther Darley 
Bertha Dent 
Louise Dickson 
Adele Dubuque 
Genevieve Dubuque 
Helen Dyer 
Lucille Eisenhariit 



Officers 


Members 

Helen Ette 
Mamie Everley 
Margery Finigan 
Julia Flannigan 
Florence Forbes 
June Forshaw 
Minna Fox 
Marion Gardner 
Louise Grant 
Edith Hammond 
Julia Hannigan 
Florence Hays 
Dorothy Hetlage 
Mildred Hess 
Mary Hope 
Margaret Howes 
Helen Hutchins 
Dorothy Jacres 
Aphrodite Jannopoulo 
Alice Johann 
Helen Johnston 
Margaret Johnston 
Lucille Kahn 
Carmen Kahn 
Dorothy Kalbfell 
Mildred Kalbflf.ish 
Marion Keene 
Lois Keim 
Sarah Kennedy 
Edith Kidwf.ll 
Marquise Klepper 
Dorothy Kremer 


Edith Hammond 
Jessamine Price 
Louise Luedeking 
Lillian Stupp 
Florence Grant 


Herminie Kurz 
Ruth Leeper 
Florence Leschen 
Mae Levy 
Mary Lewis 
Louise Luedeking 
Frances Lucas 
Kathleen Lucy 
Frances Mauley 
Miriam Martin 
Katherine McNulty 
Rae Metcalfe 
Martha Meyer 
Josephine Michael 
Gladys Moone 
Margaret Morrill 
Gladys Morey 
Bonnie Moore 
Frances Murch 
Martha Potts 
Jessamine Price 
Margaretta Rapp 
Margaret Ray 
Lucille Reidel 
Etta Reller 
Charlotte Robertson 
Margaretha Roth 
Sylvia Rosensweig 
Nellie Robnett 
Florence Runge 
Melba Ryan 

Page One Hundred Eiglity-two 






















Athletics 



Norma Sante 
Pauline Sara son 
Inez Schageman 
Adele Scherrer 
Celeste Schramm 
Grace Sewing 
Mary Skeen 
Anna Sheppard 
Leona Shepherd 


Meta Small 
Eleanore Stevens 
Anne Studt 
Lillian Stupp 
Lucy Taylor 
Grace Threadgill 
Marjorie Thompson 
Laura Tichenor 


Billy Tichenor 
Olive Underhill 
Elfrieda Uthoff 
Catherine Wagner 
Crenshaw Waller 
Alice Wills 
Leonore Wolf 
Grace Woods 
Marguerite Zoff 



Women’s Athletics 

N increased interest was shown in athletics this year by 
the women of Washington. The activities were, as usual, 
the tennis matches, the hockey, basketball and baseball 
interclass games, the swimming and the indoor meets. 
The new events of this season were the series of outdoor 
basketball games and the field meet. A get-together 
luncheon, which over a hundred women attended, was 
given at the beginning of October to arouse interest in athletics. 

This year, a new plan concerning dress was adopted. A navy blue 
uniform for outdoor sports was required of all students who took the 
compulsory gymnasium work, and also of those who participated in all 
games on the athletic field. 

Another new factor was the course in playground management. 
This was for the benefit of girls who do summer work in the city play¬ 
grounds, as well as for those who expect to teach in the grades or small 
town high schools. Besides this, an excellent course in anatomy at the 
Medical School was open, especially to women interested in playground 
work or in physical education. 

The first activity was tennis. The singles were won by Jessamine 
Price, who will have her name engraved on the Brookings cup. Helen 
Johnston and Jessamine Price, of the class of T8, won the doubles. 

Next came the hockey season which was a great success. Each 
class played every other in a preliminary series; then the two winners, 
the Seniors and Juniors, competed for the championship in a series of 
three games. The Class of ’18 was victorious for the second consecutive 
year. 

Basketball began just before the holidays. Games were played the 
last week in February and the first in March. The plan of playing each 
other class in a preliminary series and a series of three games for the 
championship was adopted. The Juniors proved themselves worthy of 
the championship for 1917. A few weeks after this, basketball games 
were played on the new out-door courts by a fresh set of teams. 

Besides arousing an interest in athletics at Washington, we have 
been able to show a broader outlook in athletics for women by sending 
a delegate to the First Conference of Western College Women’s Ath¬ 
letic Associations, held at Madison, Wisconsin, on March ninth and tenth. 


Page One Hundred Eighty-tliree 
































































Girls’ 


Basketball 


Seniors 


Blanche Walsh, R.G. 
Luella Quinn, LX,. 


Ruth Barker, R.F. (Capt.) 

Edith Hammond, L.F. 

Bertha Uhlemeyer, Center 

Substitutes: 

Katherine Middleton Alice Ernst 


Juniors 


Adele Dubuque, R.F. 

Izeyl Miller, R.G. (Capt.) 

Mary Callahan, 


Genevieve Dubuque, L.F. 
Jessamine Price, L.G. 
Center 


Roth 

McNulty 

Callaway 


Substitutes: 

Jannopoulo 

Banister 

Morrill 

R. Rhodes 


Sophomores 

Olive Underhill, R.F. (Capt.) Pauline Sarason, R.G. 

Lillian Stupe, L.F. Esther Darley, L.G. 

Irma Willett, Center 


Second Team 


Louise Luedeking, R.F. 
Nellie Robnett, L.F. 


Grace Woods 
Mary Hope 


Marion Keene, Center 
Substitutes: 


Norma Sante, R.G. 
Eleanore Stevens, L.G. 


Mabel Freeman 


Lucy Taylor 
Dorothy Brown 


Freshmen 

Frances Broermann, R.F. 

Adele Scherrer, L.F. 

Ruth Leeper, Center 
Substitutes: 

Florence Forbes Faith Young 


Frances Murch, R.G. (Capt.) 
Edith Kidwell, L.G. 


Championship Games 


March 

5 

Seniors 

12 

Juniors 

28 

March 

6 

Seniors 

22 

Juniors 

17 

March 

8 

Seniors 

18 

Juniors 

29 


The basket-ball championship was won by the Juniors. 


Page One Hundred Eighty-five 







































































Hockey 


Katherine Middleton 
Elizabeth Baker 
Gladys Morey ) 
Kath r.F.EN Lucy 
Blanche Walsh 


1 


Seniors 

Alice Johann, Center 
| Forwards 

Bertha UhlemeyerI ,, „ , 
Agnes Manley f PuU Backi 


Edith Hammond, (Capt.) 1 .... 
Dorothy Kremer ' )Wmgs 


Half Backs 


Helen McCargo, Goal 
Substitutes: Barker, Amend, Kavanaugh, Parks, Ryan 


Anna Sheppard 1 , 

Jessamine Price } Forwards 

Helen Banister ) 

Izeyl Miller 


Juniors 

Helen Johnston, Center 


Genevieve Dubuque (Capt.) \ 

Adeli; Dubuque / Wmgs 


Mary Callahan 
Rachel Metcalfe 


} 


- - Half Backs 

Marc aretha Roth ) 

Mamie Everly, Goal 

Substitutes: Runge, L. Shepard, Levy, Moone, Morrill, Eisenhardt 

Sophomores 

Dorothy Jackes, Center 

Lillian Stupp (Capt.) 1 , 

Jean Brookes } Forwards 


Full Backs 


Eleanore Stevens 
Mary Blackburn 


| IVings 


Louise Luedeking 
Mary Hope 
Irma Willett 
Etta Reller 


Half Backs 


Pauline Sarason i 

Grace Sewing Full Backs 

Mildred Hess 1 


Norma Sante, Goal 

Substitutes: Kurz, Taylor, Chapin, Lucas, Kalbfell, Schageman 


Freshmen 

Roth Moffitt, Center 


Mary Frances Price (Capt.) 
Evadne Alden 
Mildred Candy 
Bonnie Moore 
Margaret Howes 
Louise Grant 


Half Backs 


, Frances Murch 1 

forwards Noemie Bryan } W,ngs 

) 


Dorothea Burbach 
Marquise Klepper !- Full Backs 
Gertrude Lucas ' 

Carmen Kahn, Goal 

Substitutes: Wolf, Barnett, Hetlage, Waller, Uthoff, J. Flannigan, B. 

Flannigan, Falk, Keefe, E. Wolff, Mueller, Rothman, Lewis, Kidwell, Wagner, 
Hutchins 


Championship Games 

December 4 Seniors ... 1 Juniors 

December 5 Seniors ... 1 Juniors 

December 6 Seniors ... 0 Juniors 

1916 Hockey Championship won by the Juniors. 


If 

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Page One Hundred Eighty-seven 




















II 

if 


II 


1 ! 


1 

1 


Jessamine Price, 
Women’s Singles Champion 

Doubles 


Price-Johnston 

Price-Johnston \ 

Price-Johnston 

Bye 

Bye 1 

6-1, 4-6, 7-5 

Dubtiques 

Dubuques 


Callahan-Roth 

6-0, 6-1 


Stupp-Donk 1 

Dyer-Willett 

Wagner-Finigan 

Dyer-Willett 

6-3, 6-1 

6-3. 6-2 

Baker-Hammond 

Wagner-Finigan 


Wagner-Finigan 

6-0, 6-0 J 



Singles 

Johnston 

Johnston 


Bye 

Bye 

, Price 

Price 

Price 

6-4, 6-4 

Luedeking 

6-4, 3-6, 6-0 

>■ 

Willett 

Willett 


Taylor 

6-1, 4-6, 10-9 

Mabley 
■ 6-0, 6-2 

Mabley 

Mabley 

Dyer 

6-2, 6-1 



6-0, 6-0 


6-4, 6-8, 6-3 














































































































































Organizations 



Officers 

President .Prof. W. E. McCourt 

Secretary . J. G. Meyer 


Treasurer 


Dr. H. G. Lund 


GOVERNING BOARD 
Students 


College 

Montague I.yon, Jr. 

Engineering 

Russell Jolley 

Architecture 

Geo. Maguolo 


Fine Arts 

Carl Chalfant 

Medical 

Urban Busier 

Dental 

Wycliffe Kling 


Law 

Jerome Meyer 

Former Students 


W. G. Krause 

J. W. 

Calhoun 

A. P. Greensfelder 

F. H. 

Ewf.rhardt 

F. C. Carpenter 

H. G. 

Lund 

Theo. Maenner 

F. M. 

Carson 


Wm. Schaumuerg 

Faculty 


College 

W. E. McCourt 

Architecture 

Lawrence Hill 

Law 

Tyrrell Williams 

Fine Arts 

G. Von Schlegell 

Page One Hundred Eighty-nine 


Dental 

Geo. White 

Engineering 

J. L. Van Ornum 

Athletics 

W. P. Edmunds 

Medical 

G. D. Royston 
























:: g 


2 g 


* 2 


2 . 




Page One Hundred Ninety 





















11 
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II 

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Organizatio 






II 


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Officers 


President . 
Secretary . 
Treasurer . 


Benedict Schulze 
Irwin Cozzens 
Jasper Searcy, Jr. 


Benedict Schulze 


Honor Committee 

Jasper Searcy, Jr. G. Frederick Driemeyer 


Irwin Cozzens 


College 

Montague Lyon, Jr. Henry Duncker 


Benedict Schulze 


School of Engineering 

Charles Johann G. Frederick Driemeyer 


George Maguolo 


School of Architecture 

Jasper Searcy, Jr. Burton Austin 


Meredith Jones 


The Law School 

W. Lawrence Settle Herp.ert Hausman 


The Medical School 

G. Marshall Meyers Stuart Mudd Duff S. Allen 




Member at Large 

Edwin Thomas 



Page One Hundred Ninety-one 

SiS 


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Women’s Council 




Thompson, 

Banister, 


Bishop, 



Ewing, 


Brookes, 

Booth 



Page One Hundred Ninety-two 




































































































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Ninety-four 































...... • -^Vnrtif/'*- J -'r 





Established in 1904 

Officers 


President . 
Vice-President 
Secretary . 
Treasurer . 
Librarian . 
Business Manager 


Adolf Drey 
Alice Johann 
Frances Wendl 
Irwin Cozzens 
Marjorie Thompson 
Donald W. Stewart 


Active Members 


Helen Banister 
Mary Blackburn 
Minette Buddecke 
Bessie Campbell 
Helen Curtiss 
Emily Dauernheim 
Vera Dauernheim 
Margery Finnigan 
June Forshaw 
Adele Grafeman 
Frances Hays 
Mildred Hess 
Dorothy Jacres 
Alice Johann 
Edith Kidwell 
Dorothy Kremer 
Grace Lewis 
Frances Lucas 


Kathleen Lucy 
Rachel Metcalfe 
Mary Frances Price 
Etta Rellf.r 
Marjorie Thompson 
Billie Tichenor 
Grace Threadgill 
Katherine Wagner 
Frances Wendl 
Hazel White 
Alice Wills 
Dan Bartlett 
Thomas Birdsall 
Wyllys Bliss 
Philip Bryan 
Edward Byrd 
Irwin Cozzens 
Edwin F. Dakin 


Thomas Dawson 
Adolf Drey 
Fritz Grolock 
Calvin Hf.rmer 
Victor Hoester 
Sylvester Horn 
Wycliffk Kling 
Andrew Kurrus 
David Millar 
Howard Poole 
James Preston 
John Sharon 
C. E. Sharp 
Milton Stahl 
Hubert Swender 
Roland S. Tait 
H. Clarke Venable 
Charles Johann 


Associate Members 


Margaret Ewing 
Lee Harrison, Jr. 


H. W. Herrington, Ph.D. 
F. Ray Leimkuehler 
Albert Maack 


Donald Wilson Stuart 
George Maguolo 


Dan Bartlett 
Willys Buss 
Philip Bryan 
Minnette Buddeke 

Donald Stewart 


Wearers of the Mask 

Adolf Drey 
Adele Grafeman 
H. W. Herrington, Ph.D. 
Alice Johann 


Kathleen Lucy 
Rachel Metcalfe 
James Preston 
John Sharon 


Hubert Swender 


Page One Hundred Ninety-five 


































11 


IP 

11 




Mrs. Dot 

By A. Somerset Mauciiam 
Presented at the Victoria Theatre, Aerie 4, 1916 


Gerald Halstaxe 
Mrs. Dot . 

Mr. Blenkinsop 
Freddie Perkins 
Nellie Sellinger 
Lady Seli.inger 
Charles . 

George 


cast 


John Jones Sharon 
Alice Johann 
Gordon Sommers 
Adolf Drey 
Mildred Brookes 
Rae Metcalfe 
Dan Bartlett 
Hubert Swender 


Page One Hundred Ninely-si.r 


































NV.'.V.y ; . 



Thyrsus Review 




Scene from “The Importance of Being Earnest 


HYRSLS presented “Mrs. Dot,” a thr.ee-act comedy by 
W. S. Maugham, at the Victoria Theater on the evening 
of April 4th. The audience was large and very appreci¬ 
ative of the talented and finished style of the actors. The 
settings were very artistic, and the acting showed the effec¬ 
tive result of hard work. 

All the cast deserve great praise for their produc¬ 
tions. Mrs. Dot herself was played admirably. Miss Alice Johann, in this 
part, should receive most of the credit. The part was a difficult one, owing 
to the many shifts of mood and the necessity for continual liveliness, 
but Miss Johann carried it off in fine style. Miss Mildred Brookes, 
as Nellie Sellinger, was very effective, and struck the exact note of 
her role. Miss Rachel Metcalfe, in the part of Lady Sellinger, and 
Miss Frances Duft’et, as Eliza MacGregor, the maiden aunt, were very 
good in the minor parts. Of the men, Mr. Sommers had the hardest 

Page One Hundred Ninety-seven 


II 

if 

I! 

























—B 




Organizations 


work to do, but he played his part of Blenkinsop, the bachelor, with 
ability. In the part of Gerald Halstane, the hero, Mr. Sharon acted with 
great skill and dignity. Freddie, the secretary, was played by Mr. Drey, 
who showed his usual ability and talent. Mr. Bartlett and Mr. Swender 
made discreet and interesting servants. 

On May 10, Thyrsus showed its skill in another line. "The Maid of 
McMillan,” a two-reel "movie,” filmed on the campus and enacted by 
Thyrsus members, was presented at the Univee Surkuss to the great de¬ 
light of Washington University students. Gordon Morrison was the hero 
and Dean McDaris, the heroine. The other principal was Phil Bryan, who 
played the part of the hick. The story was one concerned with life at 
Washington, in which a great track meet figured, and was varied with 
such thrilling events as an elopement, hold-up, etc. This gave an oppor¬ 
tunity for the whole club to act in many scenes. 

The first monthly play of the new season, “Arms and the Man,” a 
comedy by Bernard Shaw, was presented on November 23 and 24. A 
cast of eight characters, many of whom were new on the Thyrsus stage, 
carried the action through a complicated series of events, involving the 
pursuit of a Swiss adventurer, who takes refuge in a lady’s bedroom. 
Adele Grafeman played the feminine lead, and was ably supported by 
Minette Buddecke and Mildred Hess. Dan Bartlett, as the Swiss soldier, 
acted his part with ease and skill. Roland Tait, Victor Iloester, Edward 
Byrd, and Sylvester Plorn were the other members of the cast. 

On the evenings of December 19 and 20, Thyrsus gave its next play, 
“The Importance of Being Earnest,” by Oscar Wilde. The play was a 
clever one and the acting unusually good. The plot was the story of 
events resting on the pun made on the last word of the title. Frances 
Wendl, as Cicely Cardew, made a very attractive heroine. H. Clarke 
Venable and Phil Bryan played the parts of the Englishmen who dis¬ 
covered the importance of being “Earnest.” Tom BirdsaU, Kathleen 
Lucy, Vera Dauernheim, Grace Lewis and Calvin Hermer filled the. 
remaining places in the cast. 


Page Otic Hundred Ninety-eight 

5§I 



►!»!*$» *l*<*i* v 


' "• **»U.*.0 t'i'-V »*, 












































Organ 


i z a t i o n s 


Thyrsus Monthly Productions 


“THE MAID OF McMILLAN" 


Myrtle Maroon 

(Motion Picture) 

Dean McDaris 

Jack Tower 





Gordon Morrison 

Higgins 





Phil Bryan 

Hold-up Man . 





Donald Stewart 

Hold-up Man . 





Dan Bartlett 

Messenger 





Irwin Cozzens 

Coacii 





Coach Edmunds 


"ARMS AND THE MAN" 


Raina Petkoff 
Catherine Petkoff 
Louka 
Bluntschli 
Petkoff . 

Sergius 

Nicola 

Officer 


Adele Grafeman 
Minette Buddecke 
Mildred Hess 
Dan Bartlett 
Victor Hoester 
Roland Tait 
Edward Byrd 
Sylvester Horn 


"THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST" 

John Worthing, J.P.H. Clarke Venable 

Algernon Montcreif (his friend) . . . Phil Bryan 

Rev. Cannon Chaus/lble, D.D .Thomas Birdsall 

Lady Bracknell.Kathleen Lucy 

Hon. Gwendoline Fairfax.Vera Dauernheim 

Cecily Cardew.Frances Wendl 

Miss Prim.Grace Lewis 

Lane, Merriman.Calvin Hermer 



Page One Hundred Ninety-nine 



If 

II 

I 





























































































































































































Organizat 


Mandolin Club 


President . 
Vice-President 
Treasurer . 
Director 


Irwin K. Cozzens 
Hubert Jackson 
Jasper J. Searcy, Jr. 


First Mandolins 

Fred Driemeyer 
J. V. Dunbar 
Wm. Cunliff 


Wilson Lewis 


George Graves 


Irwin K. Cozzens 
Robt. Brooks 
Milton Tucker 
Alf. Westphalen 


Everett Brooks 
W. Buss 

Arthur Joraschky 


Walton Loevy 

M. H. Tucker 
F. R. Hammond 


Second Mandolins 
Chas. Spalding 
Violins 

Guitars 
Robt. Brooks 


Arthur Nash 
Sylvester Horn 

James Preston 



Glee and Mandolin Clubs, Season of 1917 

HIRTY-FTVE members of the combined Glee and Mando¬ 
lin Club left the Union Station on Tuesday morning, 
January the ninth, for the annual trip of the musical clubs. 
While en tour the Club appeared at Farmington, Charles¬ 
ton, Sikeston, and Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 

The first stop was made at Farmington. The thirty- 
five arrived there at midday; and in the afternoon a tea 
was given in their honor. That evening the Washingtonians presented 
their program to a large and appreciative audience. And later the stay 
in Farmington was consummated with an enjoyable dance. 

The next evening found the entertainers at Charleston. Here the 
boys were again successful in amusing the crowd. 

On Thursday morning the Club favored the students of the High 
School of Sikeston with a few selections. The Club appeared in con¬ 
cert that evening. As an indication of their appreciation, the towns¬ 
people received the musicians most hospitably. 

The tour was concluded with the concert given at Cape Girardeau. 
Here, too, the boys were extensively entertained. And the performance 
was attended by an enthusiastic audience. 

Upon returning to St. Louis on January thirteenth, the Club felt 
confident that it had made a success. Not only was that fact true, but 
everyone knew that the Club had enjoyed the most successful trip that 
a group of musicians from Washington University had ever experienced. 
Owing to the fact that the Club was “keyed up to the top notch” through 
its previous practice, the Annual St. Louis Concert of January seven¬ 
teenth at the Victoria Theater was a pronounced triumph. FI. A. FI. 


Pa</e Two Hundred Two 





























Organizations 


and Mandolin Club Concert 

LARGE audience of well pleased patrons attended the 
Annual Concert of the Combined Glee and Mandolin Club 
in the Victoria Theater on the evening of Wednesday, 
January seventeenth. Judging from comments made upon 
the merits of the performance, the varied and well selected 
numbers on the program were rendered effectively and 
made an impression upon the attentive audience. 

The Glee Club scored with its opening number, “Immortal Music,” 
by Robyn; but the “songsters” showed their real caliber by an excellent 
production of Dudley Buck’s "Hark! The Trumpet Calleth!” This 
work was indeed rivaled by the delightful and finished playing of Ros¬ 
sini’s “William Tell” and Charles Gounod’s “Sing, Smile, Slumber,” by 
the Mandolin Club. 

The Varsity Quartette, composed of Messrs. Phelps, Lyon, Harlan, 
and Becker, showed up to advantage in diversified selections. Various 
combinations of Mandolin Club members, namely, the Mandolin Club 
Quartette, the Banjo Quintette, and the Musical Four, consisting of 
Messrs. Horn, Tucker, Preston, and Brooks, added much to the pleasing 
effect of the program and were encored many times. 

Solo work was successfully done by Milton Tucker on the violin. 
Walter Bode in a “takeoff” on Carmen, Hughes and Bartlett as black¬ 
face comedians; Robert Harlan in an imitation of Harry Lauder, and 
Herbert Hausman in song. This solo work contrasted with the more 
concerted forms of entertainment of the evening, lent a charming varia¬ 
tion of program. 

Therefore the performance was a decided success. However, it was 
such not only from the point of view of quality, but also from the point 
of view of finance. 


Glee 




En Route 


Page Two Hundred Three 



I 


^5 

















Friton, Phelps 

Wolff, Manager Fleming, Horn, Mueller 

Jannoponlo, Phiambolis, Mr. Galloway, Guhman, Buchmueller 






























































Washington University Alumni 
Association 


Officers 


President . 

First Vice-President 
Second Vice-President . 

Secretary . 

Treasurer . 

Corresponding Secretary 
Assistant Corresponding Secretary 


Trescott F. Chaplin, '96 
Arthur C. Kimball, ’99 
Mrs. W. E. Wittrig, ’01 
Wesley W. Horner, ’05 
Carl L. Hawkins, ’05 
Frank A. Borgsteadt, ’09 
Joanna M. Hoolan, ’06 


President, Alumni of the Medical School 
Frederick O. Schwartz 

President, Alumni of the Dental School 
J. Floyd Alcorn 


President, Alumni of the Lazo School 
Douglass W. Robert 


Page Tzvo Hundred 

























Washington University Alumni 
Association 


ROM the graduation of the first class of the Undergraduate 
Department in 1862, down to date, there has existed an 
Alumni Association, with regularly elected officers and 
periodic meetings. 

On April 14, 18S7, the alumni of the Undergraduate 
Department adopted the constitution and by-laws of “The 
Alumni Association of Washington University,” stating 
its objects to be the advancement of the interests of the University by 
such means as may from time to time seem best and the encouragement 
of mutual acquaintance among the members. Any graduate of any 
department, upon receiving his or her degree, is eligible to membership. 

The Association keeps a roster of the graduates of the College and 
Engineering School, with correct addresses; has noted the deaths of its 
members; and has published periodically several bulletins containing 
this data, thereby doing a service valuable to the University and the 
alumni. Each new class on graduation selects a secretary to assist the 
Corresponding Secretary of the Association in the maintenance of the 
Alumni Roster. 

A business meeting is held annually for the transaction of business 
and the election of officers, and an annual alumni dinner is had on the 
Saturday in February nearest to Washington’s Birthday. Other meetings 
of a business or social nature are held on call, of which especial mention 
should be made of the luncheons frequently given on Commencement 
Day to welcome the graduating class. For many years the alumni resi¬ 
dent in New York and Chicago have held annual meetings. 

The Association has a fund placed with its Executive Committee to 
afford financial aid to deserving students. 

Although drawing its members from the graduates of all depart¬ 
ments, the main support of the Association is derived from the graduates 
of the College and Engineering School. 



Page Two Hundred Seven 




















1he Annual Alumni Banquet 


i|II E Annual Alumni Banquet at the City Club on February 
17th, was, in every respect, a most remarkable gathering 
of Washington University graduates. There were one 
hundred and twenty-seven alumni and thirteen guests 
present, an attendance nearly double that of any meeting 
in recent years. Thirty-two of the last fort}' classes were 
represented. 

The Class of 1914 entered the Banquet Hall en masse, effectually 



tardy and in costume and were unanimously awarded First Prize for 
Attendance, Deportment and Mechanical Noise. They occupied the 
central table, immediately in front of the speakers, and were flanked on 
each side by the Class of To and T6, sitting at long tables. The justly 
famous aggregations of ’Oo and '07 occupied adjoining tables in a distant 
corner, far from the repressive influence of the head table. 

At the conclusion of the disorder, President Chaplin, '90, called on 
Mr. George H. Pegram, '77, to describe "Washington University from 
an Eastern Viewpoint.” Mr. Pegram who, aside from being an alumnus, 
is also Chief Engineer of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company of 
New York, and incidentally is President of the American Society of Civil 
Engineers, had made the trip solely to attend this banquet. lie spoke 
of the big things Washington men have done and are doing in the East 
and of the extent to which the reputation of the University has been 
established there. 

Dr. Nipher recounted some incidents illustrating the seriousness of 
purpose of the students in the earlier days of the University and showed 
the rapidity with which these men had achieved prominence after grad¬ 
uation. 

Dr. Engler. for the Class of '74, which was the first class repre¬ 
sented at the meeting, produced further evidence of the laurels which 
our earlier graduates have placed at the foot of Alma Mater. 

Mr. Robert Brookings, President of the Board of Directors, told of 
the development of the institution and of some of its present problems. 
He told of the need for further additional buildings and also of the 
value, which an Alumni Fund, similar to the Yale scheme, would be to 
the University. 


Judge W. II. Allen, '94, speaking of "Our Debt to the University,” 


suggested that the Alumni of the University are now well able to 
assume some responsibility in the financial conduct of the University’s 
affairs and stated that the Association should decide at once what phase 
of the work it should aid and what means should be used to raise the 
necessary funds. 

At the conclusion of these serious matters. President Chaplin pro¬ 
ceeded to relieve himself of further responsibility for the meeting, 
which thereuoon returned to that state of carefree goodfellowship which 
had marked the earlier hours. 


Page Two Hundred Eight 




i .1 ; 



n W. I 



























Deutscher Verein 



Officers 


President .Arthur Gleditzsch 

Pice-President .Marguerite Fisch 

Secretary .Leona Shepherd 

Treasurer .Henry Wensel 


Members 


Theodore Braun 
R oi \ND BUCH.MUEI.LER 

Emily Dauernhei.m 
Ralph Fuchs 
Thomas Horn 
Victor Hoester 
Adolf Hoenny 
Fannie Hoffman 
Vato Ilgen 


Helen Korncold 
Carl Rippin 
Mignon Rosenthal 
Norma Santa 
Pauline Sarasan 
Frances Trentler 
Bertha Uhlemeyer 
Lena Vicars 

Pauline Westphaf.li nger 


Page Two Hundred Nine 



































































Organized 1909 


Officers 


President .Marjorie Thompson 

Vice-President .Elizabeth Baker 

Secretary .Lucile Riedel 

Treasurer .Lucy Taylor 

Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 


Philanthropic 

Social 

Mission 

Finance 

Room 

Devotional 

Membership 

Poster 


Helen Cuppaidge 
Louise Luedeking 
Katherine Brookes 
Lucy Taylor 
Elizabeth Chapin 
Lucille Bishop 
Elizabeth Baker 
Edith Hammond 


Dorothy Aylesbury 
Evadne Alden 
Lucille Bishop 
Jean Brookes 
Katherine Brookes 
Minette Buddecke 
Helen Banister 
Dorothy Brown 
Jeanette Burke 
Noemie Bryan 
Sarah Booth 
Elizabeth Baker 
Mary Blackburn 
Helen Cuppaidge 
Mildred Candy 
Elizabeth Chapin 
Elizabeth Callaway 
Louise Dixon 
Martha Dyer 
Frances Davis . 

Elsa Eyssell 


Student Members 

Mabel Freeman 
June Forshaw 
Marian Gardner 
Adele Grafeman 
Carla Gewe 
Margaret Howes 
Edith Hammond 
Mildred Hess 
Mary Hope 
Dorothy Jacres 
Julia Jonah 
Jane Johns 
Dorothy Kalbfell 
Viola Kerchoff 
Mae Levy 
Frances Lucas 
Louise Luedeking 
Marian Martin 
Margaret Martin 
Josephine Michael 
Izeyl Miller 


Marguerite Morrili. 
Frances Murch 
Gladys Morey 
Margaret Ray 
Nellie Rohnett 
Marie Rothman 
Margaretha Roth 
Charlotte Robertson 
Lucile Riedel 
Etta Reller 
Lillian Stupp 
Anne Studt 
Norma Sante 
Mildred Smith 
Lucy Taylor 
Marjorie Thompson 
Laura Tichenor 
Billy Tichenor 
Olive Underhill 
Mildred Wass 
Grace Woods 


Page Tivo Hundred Eleven 






























Organizations 


Les Caseuses 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President 
S' ecretary- Treasu rer 


Gladys C. Morey 
Alice Ernst 
Eugenie M. Keaney 


Members 


Gladys Beal 
Louise Dickson 
Alice Ernst 
Minna Fox 
Dorothy Kalhfell 
Mildred L. Kaliifleiscii 
Eugenie M. Keaney 


Gladys Moone 
Gladys Morey 
Marguerite Morrill 
Melba Ryan 
Beulah Rodes 
Inez Schageman 
Grace Woods 




If 


If 

11 






I 




11 


I 

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11 


11 


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11 






















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II 

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11 


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Organizations 



Organized 1916 


Members 


Harvey Alban 
Helen Bannister 
Frances Barbour 
Grace Boyi.e 
Edwin Dakin 
Mildred Hess 
Adolph Hoenney 


Katherine Middleton 
Norma Sante 
Pauline Sarason 
Bessie Seifert 
Leona Shepherd 
William Skelciier 
Marjorie Thompson 


In order to satisfy students of the L diversity who were interested in discussing 
not only the poetry of “real poets” but also their own original compositions, the Poetry 
Club was organized. In order to prove to the Committee for Admissions that he is 
truly interested in the writing of poetry, an applicant for membership must write an 
original poem. The Poetry Club has no formal meetings nor organization, 
twice a month with a despot, chosen from the members, presiding. 


It meets 




























Page Two Hundred Fourteen 


















































































































































Anderson, Reichard, Connelly, Watkins, Prof. Berger, Prof. Olde 

Loeffel, Weipcrt, Gronemeyer, Robinson 

Shepperd, Mellow, Werner, Hallet, Mr. Sicgrist, Mr. McDowell, 

Wetzel. Tluitnser, Conzelman, Keysor, Smyth, Kurz, Pope, Hughes 

































Organizations 



Officers 


Honorary Chairman ...... Professor E. L. Ohle 

Chairman .Harold C. Keysor 

Vice-Chairman .Forest B. Wetzel 

Secretary ., Walter H. Kurtz 

Treasurer .James C. Shepherd 

Faculty Members 

Professor E. L. Ohle Mr. W. W. MacDowei.l 

Professor F. A. Berger Mr. W. Siegerist 

Mr. R. J. Sapper 


Student Members 
1917 


John Wilson Conzei.man 
Elmer Lisle Hughes 
Harold Clark Keysor 
Walter Henry Kurtz 
Herbert William Meinholtz 


Clarence Elmer Muehlberg 
Nelson Moody Pope 
Sylvester Watts Smyth 
Robert Charles Thumser 
Forest Burkhardt Wetzel 


1918 



James Monroe Connally 
Herbert William Gronemf.yf.r 
Dwight Buel Harper 
Samuel Gregory Hallett 

Elmer Louis Werner 


William Joseph Koenig 
George Edward Mellow 
James Cecil Shepherd 
Malcolm Michaels Travis 


1919 


William James Anderson, Jr. 

Albert Gus Loeffei. 

Harry George Reichard 

John Richard Weipert 


Robert Rf.x Robinson 
Willis Wade Walters 
Charles Rives Watkins 


Paijc Tzi'o Hundred Seventeen 































































Lange, Smith, Glasgow, Lieber, Dean Langsdorf 
Bankson, Spaulding, Tate, Mr. Hake. 

Baker, Jacobs, Predock, Roberts, Craig, Mr. Blattcrman, Dolch, Fontana 
Frier, Mullin, Chandler, Crowdus, McDonald, Monroe, Tripodi, Arbuckle, Proctor, Fattman, Mr. Bubb, Bare 













































I 

II 


I 


I 

II 

I! 

I 

If 



Organizations 



Officers 


Honorary Chairman 
Chairman . 
Vice-Chairman 
Secretary-Treasurer 


Dt AN A. S. Lancsdorf 
C. F. Lieber 
L. M. Bare 
R. W. MacDonald 


P 

1 | 

f 


1 

u 

I 

Ip 


IP 

II 

II 

IP 


II 

II 

IP 


Members 

1917 


L. M. Bare 
B. S. Dolch 
A. A. Fattman 


C. A. Lif.her 
W. P. Monroe 
B. H. Roberts 


1918 

W. MacDonald 
P. Predock 

H. D. Smith 


R. M. Arhuckle R. 

R. S. Glascow N. 






























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Page Two Hundred Twenty \\ 

191 


•..■■•• •■••• 



























































































































Organizations 





Officers 


President 

Secretary 

Treasurer 


E. J. Ulbricht 
G. F. Driemeyer 
W. C. Adams 


Faculty Members 


Dr. Leroy McM aster 
Dr. L. F. Nickel 
Dr. W. V'. Hoyt 


Mr. Elmer E. Pickett 
Mr. P\ Burton Lax check 
Mr. J. C. F. Walker 


Student Members 
1917 


Albert Eli Goldstein Walter Henry Kurtz 

Edwin Julius Ulbricht 


1918 


Wilbur Cook Adams 
Lackland Beeding 
Harold Hall Harvey 


Joseph F. Stickley 


Joshua Sutheri.ix Logan 
Paul Graham Marsh 
Harold Ellsworth Mateer 


1919 


John S. Boulden 
Frank Jack Danglade 
George Fred Driemeyer 
Edmund Keough 
Berthold Lambert Lange 
William Mason Perry 


Sam Polinsky 
Roger William Renkel 
Albert William Roth 
Leon Schwartzman 
Edgar Schwarz 
Harold Van Horn 


Page Two Hundred Twenty-three 




V '.KMi 1 .««.V 


. • • ■ 















































































m. 

Ip 




ornctR.3 

J9HNR-M9LL —PRESIDENT 


FRAY LEIMKVEHLER - VICE-PRES 
LEO E. ABRAMS — 5EC.-TREAS 

BVRTON AVSTIN -SOV3-/AA53IJR 


FACVLTY 


PR2F.G.FERRAND PR9K HOLMES SMITH 
A55.PR9E LAWRENCE HILL T. CVTTING 
AVSTIN BITCH 


honorary members 
PR&F. W.E.M9COVRT PR9F.J.VAN OR.NVM 
STVDENT MEMBERS 

TO ST- GR AT5VATE 

FRED R. HAMMOND LV3BY S1MPS9N T.F. 
1317 

LEO.E. ABRAMS ALBERT C- MAACK 

RAYM9ND L- HERBERT qreRQE J-MAGV9L0 



JOHN R.M9LL 



T-EAY LEIMKVEHLER 

1918 ' 

H9MER CASE TRANK R9WAN 

J-JASPER. SEARCY J* 

1919 

BVRT2N AVSTIN H-J-REED BARRETT 
WILL POHRER R1BGELY YOVNG 

19 EO 

VAN.A.BENISON E-W- MATEER 

CHARLES M. GRAY GILBERT H- MEYERS 
CLPYI5 B- GVSTAFS2N CLEMENS NICK LAVS 
J-ARNDT HERR9N ALFRED H-N9RRI3H 
SPENCER. G-R9SE KVRT WILHELM1 
SPECIAL 

GABRIEL P-PVBVOVE W»RAY FERRIS 





I 
























































































































• ■•'.■.•iV.’tVlvi'’*'- ‘ * - 


• • - % ■•;? ;?;vw.v*y 


• 'VAS&Cinccafsw.;*.. 



President . 
Vice-President 
Treasurer . 

Secretary . 

Hatchet Representative 


Alonzo Rouse Kieffeii 
William B. Kountz 
Milo Lawrence Heideman 
Harry William Wiese 
William Skelcher 


Clyde Heffner Smith 


Karl John Balazs, Jr. 
Wm. George Bechtolii 
Louis Cohen 
Arthur Esserman 
Armand Dehner Fries 
Theodore Henry Hanser 


Faculty Member 

Edward Benedict Grogan, B.S. 

1918 

Peter Frank Smith, Jr. 

1919 


Milo Lawrence Heideman 


Alexis Frank Hartmann Horace Wiley Pote 
Roiiert Edwin Jenkinson William Skelcher 

Alonzo Rouse Kieffer Edgar Walter Spinzig 

Ralph Edwin Kleinschmidt Caldwell Blenford Summers 
John Rayl Morris Albert Wall 

John Collins McKitterick Paul Kingsley Webb 

Louis Gabriel Zklson 


Emanuel Arnovitz 
Bertram Louis Bersche 
Thomas Charles Birdsall 
William Hugo Broeder 
Francis John Canepa 
Theodore Wright Crossen 
William Joseph Dieckmanx 
Reinhold Emil Dietzscholii 
William Dock 
Martin Feeney Eng.m an, Jil 


1920 

Irwin Herman Eskeles 
Edward Henry Giessow 
Arthur Summerville Goodall 
George Breckenridge Groves 
Richard Jones 
Charles Burton Keeble 
William B. Kountz 
Martin Lasf.rsohn 
Curtis Harry Lour 
Nelson Tinsley Pearson 
Harry William Wiese 


Page Two Hundred Twenty-seven 


Piiineas David Stahl 
Ward White Summerville 
Frank Justin Tracy 
Irl George Tremain 
Mao-Te Tsao 
Askell Meyers Vaughn 
Harry Osburn Vosburgh 
Jacob Wax 

William Charles Wayne 
Fred William Wedel 






















































■ 'S'///////////////////////;///////////////////////////, 




« 

I 


I 


P u b 1 i c a t i o n s 


OTUDEMT 



xxa 


Established 1878 

A weekly paper, published every Thursday by the Student Life Association 


Editorial Staff 


Editor-in-Chief 
Managing Editor 

Associate Editors 

Athletic Editor 
Society Editor . 
Exchange Editor 


James Alexander Preston 
Montague I.yon, Jr. 

Phie Bryan 
Alice Johann 
J. Hixon Kinsella 
Kathleen Lucy 
Raf. Metcalfe 


Business Staff 

Easiness Manager . 

Assistant Business Manager .... 
Circulation Manager . 


Brooke S. Thompson 
Henry Duncker 
Ed Shard 


Reporters 




Helen Cuppaidge, ’17 
Edith Hammond, T7 
George Nagel, ’17 
Walton Loevy, T8 
H. C. Venable, ’18 
Archie Carr, T8 
Anne Sheppard, 18 
Margaret Martin, ’19 

Grace Threadgill, ’20 


Nellie Robnett, T9 
John Bouliien, T9 
Fritz Grolock, ’19 
Francis Douglas, '19 
R. Lyon, T9 
Traubel Burke, '19 
Irwin Bringes, T9 
Allen Modisette, ’20 





Page Tieo Hundred Twenty-nine 

















































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HATCHET 




BOATED 


Jonn Jon&r /haron 
Edifor-m-Chiejf 


Walfer.A .Ho.mp 

Bunnerj-Md.n easier 






John Aon Craik 
Adverfim^ManeJer 


Jexramine Price 
Amociede Edifor 


Hlarq Callahan 
Associate Edifor 




Mar^Areiha j^ofh. 
Aj’j’ociafe Edifor 


Philrp.D.Bruon 

T^eviAu-Edifor 


Page Two Hundred Thirty; 

f. 


























Jodrper Je&$cu 
Art Editor 


MonWue LuonJr. 
Athletic Editor 


Vernon. P&rKinron 
Ajiroeiaie Editor 


Dan Barf left 
Photographer 


Helen ht±e 
Arrt.Arf Editor 


DuiAhf Hompron 
Phofodra.ph.er 


Vyl Horn 
Adveriinnp/olicifor 


Page Two Hundred Thirty-one 


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The Eliot Literary Magazine 

Founded May, 1915 


Officers 


Edilor-in-Chief 
Managing Editor 
Buxine s Manager . 

Assistant Business Manager . 
Circulation Manager 


Edward D. Nix 
Vernon Parkinson 
George C. Nagel 
Charles F. Keebaugh 
Wm. B. Knight, Jr. 


Active Members 


Morris Carnovsky 
Adolph Hoenny 
Leona Shepherd 


J. Hixon Kinsella 
Adolph Drey 
Harvey Alban 


John J. Sharon 


Founders 


Delius Kotthoff 
Kendall Harrison 
Adolf Drey 
Edward D. Nix 

Emanuel Hahn 


Alice Johann 
Earle H. Amos 
Douglass Vass Martin 
Charles Studt 


Page Two Hundred Thirty-two 























































































































































Secret Societies 


Fraternities at Washington 

CLASS SOCIETIES 


Men’s Societies 

Name Established" 

Pralma (Senior Honorary).1904 

“13" (Junior Honorary).1904 

Lock and Chain (Sophomore).1904 

Obelisk (Freshman).1904 

Women’s Societies 

Keod (Senior Honorary).1914 

Clais (Freshman).1915 

Pleides (Honorary Hockey Society).1915 


FRATERNITIES 


Honorary 


Fraternity 

Phi Beta Kappa (Classical) 


Chapter 

Missouri Beta .... 

Established 

1914 

Sigma Xi (Scientific) . 




Alpha Omega Alpha (Medical) . 


Missouri Alpha .... 

1905 

Scarab (Architectural) 

Professional 

1914 

Artus (Economics) 



1915 

Phi Delta Phi (Legal) 


Cooley. 

1882 

Phi Beta Pi (Medical) 


Mu. 

1903 

Chi Zeta Chi (Medical) 


Omicron. 

1906 

Xu Sigma Nu (Medical) . 


Alpha Kappa Phi 

1900 

Xi Psi Phi (Dental) . 


Tau. 

1901 

Delta Sigma Delta (Dental) 


Upsilon. 

1904 

Beta Rho (Chemical) . 


(Local). 

1916 

Phi Delta Theta . 


Social 

Missouri Gamma 

1891 

Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 


Missouri Beta ... 

1892 

Beta Theta Pi ... 


Alpha Iota. 

1901 

Sigma Chi .... 


Tau Tau . 

1902 

Sigma Nu .... 


Gamma Omicron 

1903 

Kappa Alpha (So.) 


Beta Theta. 

1905 

Theta Xi 


Iota. 

1905 

Kappa Sigma .... 


Beta Sigma. 

1902 

Alpha Kappa Delta 


(Local). 

1916 

Kappa Alpha Theta 

SORORITIES 

. Alpha Iota. 

1906 

Pi Beta Phi. 


Missouri Beta .... 

1907 

Delta Gamma .... 


Alpha Epsilon .... 

1914 

Gamma Phi Beta . . 


Phi. 

1917 

Pi Mu Alpha .... 


(Local). 

1917 


Page Two Hundred Thirty-three 



































































































































































Lock and Chain 


Duncker, 

Watkins, 


. 


s 




Dawson, Strain, 
Knight, 


Bliss 

Shanley 


Page Two Hundred Thirty-six 































Class Societies 


Lock and Chain 


Sophomore Society 


Organized 1904 



Active Members, Class of 1919 

Chas. Watkins 
Fred Driemeyer 
Harold Knight 
Henry Dunckf.r 
Herbert Strain 


David Millar 
Thomas Dawson 
Connor Shanley 
Wyllis Bliss 
Everett Brooks 


Page Tzvo Hundred Thirty-seven 





































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Obelisk 


II 

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Spaulding, 


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Stuart, Henderson, Englesman 


Facie Tu’u Hundred Thirly-ciyht 


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Obelisk Society 


Freshman Society 


Organized 1904 



Active Members, Class of 1920 


Lucien Brigham 
Geo. Englesman 
Harold Francis 
Robert Henderson 
Chas. Imse 


Duncan McCallum 
Alfred Norrish 
Edward O’Brien 
Chas. Spaulding 
Lewis Stuart 


Chas. Wyman 


Page Two Hundred Thirty-nine 


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Women's Senior Honorary Society 



Page Two Hundred Forty 














































































Organized 1915 

i 

Active Members 
1917 


Alice Johann 
Elizabeth Baker 
Katherine Middleton 


Mary Callahan 
Adele Dubugue 
Genevieve Dubugue 


Lillian Stupp 

1919 


1918 

Emma Vogt 


Paije Two Hundred, Forty-one 



Edith Hammond 
Frances Blackburn 
Kathleen Lucy 


Helen Johnston 
Rachel Metcalfe 
Jessamine Price 























































































































































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Fraternities 



'^////////////////////////////////////A ^ 


Pan-Hellenic Baseball 


Standing of the Teams 


April 28th 

Sigma Chi . 


4 


Kappa Alpha 


0 

April 29th 

Theta Xi 


6 


Beta Theta Pi 


5 

April 30th 

Phi Delta Theta . 


22 


Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 


5 

May 2nd 

Theta Xi . 


7 


Sigma Chi 


5 

May 4th 

Phi Delta Theta . 


9 


Sigma Nu 


4 

May 18th 

Phi Delta Theta . 


7 


Theta Xi 


5 


Schedule and Scores 



Fraternity 

Won 

Lost 

Percentage 

Phi Delta Theta 

3 

0 

1.000 

Theta Xi . 

2 

1 

.667 

Sigma Chi 

1 

1 

.500 

Kappa Alpha . 

0 

1 

.000 

Sigma Nu 

0 

1 

.000 

Sigma Alpha Epsilon 

0 

1 

.000 

Beta Theta Pi . 

0 

1 

.000 



Page Tzco Hundred Forty-seven 















































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Phi Delta Theta 



Established 1891 

Founded at Miami University, 1848 


Missouri Gamma Chapter 


Fratres in Facultate 


George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. 
John Hart Brown, A.M. 
Albert S. Blatterman, B.S. 


Walter Fischel, A.B., M.D. 
Ralph Walter Mills, B.S., M.D. 
Charles Parker Williams, A.B. 


Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Alfred H. Caffee 
Lee Harrison, Jr. 

James Wilson Hill 
Ralph Brown well Hill 
Meredith Craig Jones 


Henry Fremont Leukinc 


1918 


William Bernard McSorley 
James Alexander Preston 
Edward Humphrey Price 
Frank Laurif. Scott, Jr. 
Forest Burkhardt Wetzel 


Clyde Heffner Smith 


W. Leland Mitchell 


William Weston Blelock 
Hiram Newton Holladav 
David Franklin Leavitt 


1919 


1920 


Robert Harvey McRoberts 
Herbert Arthur Strain 
Frederick Herder Wulfing 


John Watson Cook 
William Dock 
John Harris 


Robert Lee Andre 
Paul Shikon Barker 


Page Tzvo Hundred Forty-nine 


Wilson Lewis 
Lewis B. Stuart 
Thomas Wagner 
William Roth well Watts 

Pledged 

Theodore Wright Crossen 

Inactive Members 

Harry Spencer Brookes 
Richard Jones 
Thomas Benjamin Noble 

















































Schwartz, Kortkamp, Denison 

Case, Frielingsdorf, McCarthy, Dawson, Weber, Taylor, Kirsch 
McElwee, Davis, Morey, Meier, Johann 










































Sigma Alpha Epsilon 



Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856 
Missouri Beta Chapter Established 1892 


Fratres in Facultate 

Charles Elijah Galt, B.S. Jesse Moore Green man, Ph.D. 

Charles Wotring Studt, A.B. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Thomas D. Davis 


Percy E. Meier 
Theodore A. Morrey 


1918 


Marshall Hall 


Charles Johann 
Frederick W. Schwartz 


1919 


Thomas Dawson 
William Ferris 
John B. Frielincsdorf 
Alonzo R. Kieffer 
Foster Kirsch 


Otto Kortkamp 
Stanley J. McCarthy 
Claude Webster McElwee 
Mack Taylor 
Barrett Weber 


1920 


Van Denison 

Pledged 


Roger Allen Duncan McCallum 

George Englesmann Jamerson C. McGormack 

Pierce Johnson Payne Ratner 

Philip Webster 


Faye Two Hundred Fifty-one 














































r.’.‘■ 





















Fraternities 


Beta Theta Pi 


11 

II 

II 

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Founded at Miami University, 1839. 

Alpha Iota Chapter Established 1865 

Re-established 1901 

Fratres in Facultate 

Francis Eugene Nipher, Professor Emeritus 


John Lane Van Ornum, C.E. 
LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D. 
Edward B. Grogan, A.B. 


John Bi.aisdf.ll Shapleigh, A.B., M.D. 
Paul Yoer Tupper, M.D. 

F. L. Morris, M. D. 


Fratres in Universitate 

Graduate Student 

George Strodtman Metcalfe, A.B. 

Special Student 

Adiel Stewart McCormack 


Jerome Gustav Meyer 
Luke Sells Stites 

Wilbur Cook Adams 
Emphy Benway 
Philip David Bryan 
Traubel Thomas Burke 
Samuel Becker Grant 

John Searles Bouldon 
William Walter Cunliff 
James Vernon Dunbar 

George Berger 
Lucien Morris Brigham 


Harry Zelle 


1917 


1918 


1919 


1920 


Pledged 


Harry Lee Thomas 
Brooke Stillwell Thompson 

Wycliffe Everett Kling 
Andrew William Kurrus 
Frank Brien Rowan 
James Jasper Searcy, Jr. 
John Jones Sharon 

Henry Philip Duncker 
Herbert August Hausman 
Arthur William Lindholm 


Allen Modisette 
Frank Havelock Simmons 


Alfred Marquard 


Inactive Members 


Bradford French Dearing 
Guy Hopkins 


Arthur Edwin Mahle, B.S. 
Roland Tait 


Page Two Hundred Fifty-three 
















































Fraternitie 


8 

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Founded at Miami University, 1855 

Tau Tau Chapter Established 1902 

Fratres in Facultate 

Ernest O. Sweetser, C.E. Joseph W. Larimore, M.D. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Urban j. Busier 
Irwin K. Cozzens 


James B. Costen 
John W. Geppert 
Harold H. Harvey 


Thomas Birdsall 
Wyi.lys King Buss 


Charles Keebaugii 
Richard Kremer 


1918 

Fielding Stapleton 

1919 

1920 


David Sparks 

Pledged 

Jennings Rowley 


Page Two Hundred Fifty-five 


Albert C. Maack 
John Moll 


Henry S. Miller 
Charles L. Newport 
Charles E. Sharp, Jr. 


William Perry 
Harold Van Horn 


Warren Miller 
Charles T. Spalding 




























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Si^ma Nu 





Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869 
Gamma Omicron Chapter Established 1903 

Fratres in Universitate 

1917 


Harold A. Cox 
Logan F. Hachman 


Hubert W. Swendek 


Russell L. Jolley 
Joseph L. Patton 


1918 


Harry Wilks Fulbrigiit 
Fritz K. Grolock 
T. Ray Hollensiiead 


Josh S. Logan 
J. Cecil Sheperd 
Elmer L. Werner 


.Archie D. Carr 
F. Jack Danglade 
Chauncey P. Frier 
Reed B. Hark ness 
Otis E. Keough 


1919 


Charles R. Watkins 


Hiram S. Liggett 
David L. Millar 
J . Morton Moore 
Irving C. Neale 
Horace N. Pote 


1920 


Harold H. Francis 


Charles E. Hamlin 


Pledged 

George Williams 


Page Two Hundred Fifty-seven 











































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Fraternitie 


Kappa Alpha 





Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1865 
Beta Theta Chapter Established 1905 

Fratres in Facilitate 

Paul Reece Rider, Ph.D. Garnett Gladwin Sedgewick, Ph.D. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Walter Otto Bode 
Edward R. Byrd 
Emmet T. Carter 


Harold Brummell 
Patrick H. Kennedy 
Montague Lyon, Jr. 
William C. Martin 


G. Fred Driemeyer 
S. Nelson Dalby 
George S. Fricke 


Edward Barn edge 
Francis Harold Barnidgi: 
Arthur W. Becker 
Russell Horsefield 


Robert Henderson 
Royle Moseley 


1918 


1919 


Joe Wieneke 

1920 


Pledged 


S. Watts Smyth 
Edwin R. Thomas 
Clifford Taussig 


George Mellow 
Marriott Morrison 
Vernon Parkinson 
Edwin H. Rohlfing 


Randolph Smith Lyon 
John C. McKitterick 
Max S. Muencii 


S. Knight Loy 
William Herman Luyties 
Eugene Lee Schrader 
Chari.es E. Staudinger 


Arthur Nash 
Leonard Woods 


Page Two Hundred Fifty-nine 


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Fraternities 

Theta Xi 



Founded at Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1864 

Iota Chapter Established 1905 

Frater in Facultate. 

Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. 


Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


F. Ray McFarland 
Elmer L. Hughes 

George Maguolo 

1918 

Herbert W. Meinholtz 
Benjamin H. Roberts 
Benedict H. Schulze 

Theodore Gupton 
Dwight Harper 

Paul A. Hof 

1919 

Walter A. Kamp 

Paul Marsh 

Roger Renkel 

Fred Foelsch 

Karl 0. Kamp 

1920 

Connor Shanley 

Willis W. Walters 

Roiiert Bankston 

Ira Berry 

Edward O’Brien 

Herbert Briner 
William Krenning 


Pledged 

Albert Wipke 



Page Tivo Hundred Sixty-one 



















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Fraternities 


Kappa Sigma 



Founded at the University of Virginia, 1867 


Beta Sigma Chapter 


Established 1902 


Frater in Facultate 

William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D. 


Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Joseph Jackson Gravely, A.B., A.M. 
Edward Daniel Nix 


Raymond William Peters 
Donald Wilson Stewart 


1918 


Georce Daniel Bartlett 
Stanford Hollocher 
James Hiram Kelley 
Carl Otto Kohi.bry 


Norman Webber Pemberton 
Wilford Lawrence Settle, A.B. 
Erwin Peter Stupp 
H Clarke Venable 


1919 


J. Hixon Kinsella 
Marion Leschen 


Edwin Huttig Nahm 
Albert William Roth 


James Dunn Conzelman 


1920 


Charles King Imse 


Page Tzuo Hundred Sixty-three 

































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Phi Delta Phi 



Cooley Chapter 


Founded at University of Michigan, 1869 


Established 1882 


Fratres in Facultate 

William Samuel Curtis, A.B., LL.B., LL.D. Meade Tyrrei. Williams, A.B., LL.B. 
Richard L. Goode, A.B., M.A., LL.D. Charles P. Williams, A.B. 

Frederick August Wislizenus, A.B., LL.B. Joseph Henry Zumbalen, LL.B. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Emmet Carter 
Thomas Davis, Jr. 
Joseph J. Gravely, 


Meredith C. Jones 
Joseph L. Patton, A.B. 

A.B., A.M. George L. Stemmler, A.B. 

Maurice S. Weeks 


1918 


Foster H. Brown 
Stanley D. Campbell, A.B. 

R. Walston Chubb, A.B. 

Milton R. Stahl, 


J. Meston Holmes, A.B. 
James H. Kelley 
W. Lawrence Settle, A.B. 
A.B. 


1919 


G. Irvin Bringes 


Irving C. Neale, A.B. 
Frederick H. Wulfing 


Page Two Hundred Sixty-seven 


















































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Fratres in Facultate 

Honorary 

LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry 
Active 

William Veknor Hoyt, Ph.D. Lloyd Francis Nickell, Ph.D. 

Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. 


Fratres in Universitate 

Graduate Students 

Frederick Burton Laxgreck, B.S. John Charles Walker, B.S. 


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Professional Fraternities 


Beta Rho 


Albert Eli Goldstein 


1917 


1918 


Edwin Julius Uluricht 


Joshua Sutherlin Logan Paul Graham Marsh 

Joseph Frederick Stickley 


1919 


Wilder Cook Adams 
George Fred Driemeyer 


Harold Morgan Van Horn 


Albert William Roth 
ivieldert Edgar Schwarz 


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Professional Fraternities 


Phi Beta Pi 


Mu Chapter 


James F. Abbott, Ph.D. 
Lei.and B. Alford, M.D. 
Wii.lard Bartlett, M.D. 

E. A. Baumgartner, Ph.D. 
Malcolm A. Buss, M.D. 
Jos. Bredreck, M.D. 
Stanley Burns, M.D. 
Norman B. Carson, M.D. 
J. R. Caulk, M.D. 

W. L. Clapper, M.D. 
Frank L. Davis, M.D. 

T. M. Davis, M.D. 

Wm. P. Edmunds, M.D. 


G. D. Callaway 
R. P. Dorris, A.B. 

A. H. Haynes, A.B. 


B. C. Ball, B.S. 

G. H. Copher, A.B. 
M. J. Fardy, M.S. 
L. P. Gay, A.B. 



E. H. Terrill 


Fratres in Universitate 

Arthur E. Ewing, M.D. 

F. H. Ewerhardt, M.D. 

A. O. Fischer, M.D. 

R. F. Fischer, M.D. 

A. Gundelach, M.D. 

Julius H. Gross, M.D. 
Harry G. Grf.ditzer, M.D. 
Lewis K. Guggenheim, M.D. 
Geo. Gilhorn, M.D. 

Leo C. Huelsman, M.D. 

H. M. Johnson, M.D. 

W. L. Johnson, M.D. 

Jonas C. Kopelowitz, M.D. 

Fratres in Universitate 

1917 

G. B. McArthur, A.B. 
Robert Mueller, B.S. 

E. W. Netherton, A.B. 

B. Weathers, B.S. 

1918 

P. C. Hodges 

H. W. Maxey 
Hugo Muench, A.B. 

Ciias. O’Keefe, A.B. 


Established 1903 


J. W. Larimore, M.D. 
Eugene L. Opie, M.D. 

A. J. O’Reilly, M. D. 
Llewellyn Sale, M.D. 
Wm. E. Sauer, M.D. 

O. R. Sevin, M.D. 

John B. Shapleigii, M.D. 
E. L. Shehan, M.D. 

Selig J. Simon, M.D. 
Greenfield Sluder, M.D. 
W. S. Thomas, M.D. 
Meyer Wiener, M.D. 
Fred E. Woodruff, M.D. 


E. F. Robb, A.B. 
H. Schumacher 
J. E. Watteniiurg 


1919 


D. S. Allen 

E. A. Blondin 


G. H. Hopkins, A.B. 
F. C. Howard, A.B. 
R. V. Powell 

1920 

T. S. I.ove 


W. A. Rupe, A.B. 

H. H. Shackelford. A.B.A.M. 
Olof Sundwall, A.B. 

E. A. Stranquist, B.S. 

J. A. Tesson, A.B. 


O. S. Krebs 

R. L. Murdock, A.B. 


Page Two Hundred Seventy-one 






















































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Professional Prater 


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Chi Zeta Chi 



SE3£ 


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Omicron Chapter 


Established 1906 


Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


11 

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Powell Frank McNalley 


1918 


George Cresswell 
Arthur Clark Goff 


Sanford M. Withers 


Johannes Pessel 
George Polk 


1919 


George C. W. Belcher 
Arthur Brookes 
Urban Busier 


George Briggs 


Page Tzvo Hundred Seventy-three 


1920 


Marshall Hall 


William G. Coleman 
William C. Oepts 
Arthur B. Raffl 


Harold Gaebe 













































































Nu Sigma Nu 


Alpha Kappa Phi Chapter 


George Dock, M.D. 

Henry Schwartz, M.D. 
Harvey C. Mudd, M.D. 
George M. Tuttle, M.D. 
Malvern B. Clopton, M.D. 

G. Canby Robinson, M.D. 
Dennis E. Jackson, M.D. 
Philip C. Jeans, M.D. 

H. Edward Miller, M.D. 
Oliver H. Campbell, M.D. 
Fred T. Murphy, M.D. 
Paul Y. Tupper, M.D. 
Marsh Pitzman, M.D. 


H. R. Brookes 
Clarence J. Brown, B.S. 

Cecil M. Burcbfiel, A.B., B.S. 
Bradford F. Dearinc 
George B. Garrison, A.B. 


Anthony B. Day, B.S. 
William P. Gasser 

William L 


Carl O. Koiilbry 


Braxsford L. Adelsberger 
Robert L. Aniirae 
Archie D. Carr 



Established 1900 


Fratres in Facilitate 

Ellsworth Smith, M.D. 
Francis R. Fry, M.D. 
Nathaniel Allison, M.D. 
Walter Baumgarten, M.D. 
Adrien S. Bleyer, M.D. 
Meredith R. Johnson, M.D. 
Otto Schwartz, M.D. 

Fred Rahlen, M.D. 

C. E. FIyndman, M.D. 

H. M. Young, M.D. 

David E. Smith, M.D. 

John Judy, M.D. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 

Alexander C. Kirby, A.B. 
Michael D. Moran, B.S. 
George M. Meyers, B.S. 
Henry S. O’Donnell, A.B. 
Bernard A. O’Hora, B.S. 
Frederick E. Wrightman, A. 


Edmund Bechtold, M.D. 
Dalton K. Rose, M.D. 
William H. Omstead, M.D. 
Oscar F. Bradford, M.D. 
Philip P. Green, M.D. 

M. J. Arbuckle, M.D. 

J. E. Stewart, M.D. 

D. W. Luten, M.D. 

H. H. Hagin, M.D. 

B. Landis Elliott, M.D. 

C. W. Tooker, M.D. 

D. B. Garstang, M.D. 
Francis M. Barnes, M.D. 


Kenneth C. Peacock, B.S. 
Nelson W. Siieley 
Forest H. Staley, A.B. 
Albert R. Tormey, A.B. 
Frank B. Wallace, B.S. 

B. 


1918 

Wilbur G. Gillett, A.B. Arthur E. Mahle, B.S. 

Henry F. Luekinc, B.S. Joseph W. McKee 
. Mitchell Earl C. Padgett, B.S. 


1919 

Edwin H. Rohlfing 


William G. Wander 


Pledged 

William S. Carter 
James B. Costen 
Samuel B. Grant 
Hiram S. Ligcett 


Walter R. Moore 
Stuart Mudd, B.S. 
Henry T. Summa, A.B. 


Page Two Hundred Seventy-five 


























1 Psi Phi 





















14 

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II 
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Professional Prate rnitie 


Xi Psi Phi 



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arx5. 


Tail Chapter 


Established 1901 


Fratres in Facultate 

Walter H. Bartlett, D.D.S. James A. Brown, D.D.S. 

Berno E. Lischer, D.D.S. Louis G. Neuhoff, D.D.S. 

Jesse O. White, D.M.D. William H. Seifert, D.D.S 

Walter F. Neuhoff, D.D.S. 


Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Thomas L. Barxidge 
Herbert V. Blount 
Forrest W. Cone 
Walter J. Faber 
Earl N. Henderson 


C. Julius Beinker 
Emphy Benway 
Francis J. Brandenburg 
N. Louis Buck 
Benjamin E. Dixon 
E. Charles Elsner 
James E. Harding 


Norman P. Brown 
Archie D. Cooper 
Scott M. Davidson 
George L. Fearheiley 
Sylvester E. Fendlf.r 


Alfred Caffee 
Jessf. L. Coats 
Charles H. Dean 


Walter L. White 

1918 


Thurlo T. Weir 

1919 


Pledged 


Russell C. Wheeler 


Leonard J. Hitz 
Porter H. Miller 
Fayette D. Pendleton 
Barney L. Russell 
Harry R. Shanley 


Jacob O. Hitz 
H. Pratt Loudermilk 
James D. Nelson 
Lyle D. Perry 
Larkin E. Stark 
William W. Stroh 
S. Cecil Thomas 


Frank G. Kavanaugh 
Stanley J. McCarthy 
James M. McLellan 
Loren O. Newport 
Leo W. Reid 


Carroll L. Moore 
Mack Taylor 
George S. Westfall 


Page Tivo Hundred Seventy-seven 

'""/////■ 











































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Pa<7<? Tsc/fl Hundred Seventy-eight 






















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Professional Fraternities 


Delta Siema Delta 



Upsilon Chapter 


Established 1904 


Fratres in Facultate 


John Hanger Kennerly, M.D., D.D.S. 
Ewing P. Brady, D.D.S. 


Otto William Brandhorst, D.D.S. 

Fratres in Universitate 
1917 


Fred John Brockman, A.B., D.D.S. 
Frank H. Fof.rster, D.D.S. 


Carlisle Carson 
Wendell A. Anthony 
Paul I. Kriege 


Harold H. Brum mall 
Harry A. Burns 
Ralph S. Hall 


George A. Cltpner 
Leslie C. Hilderbrand 


Alfred D. Barnett 
Carl J. Benning 
Elmer N. Cox 


Albert J. Jacobsmeyer 
Faris C. Elzea 
Louis H. Renfrow 
Oswald W. Thumser 

1918 

Thomas R. Holi-inshead 
Bertram E. Gilster 
Wycliffe E. Kling 

1919 

William J. Koi.n 
Clarence W. Koch 
George H. Van Dusen 

Pledged 

S. Nelson Daluy 
William L. Glf.nn 
Frank O. Raney 
L. Audrf.y Williams 


Edward T. Gallagher 
Amos PI. Rode 
James H. Taylor 


James M. Moore 
Roy C. Park hill 

A. V ERNETTE SANDERS 


Alfred Marquard 
Oliver F. Orton 


Arthur J. Reimers 
Howell F. Shannon 
Joe C. Wieneke 


Page Two Hundred, Seventy-nine 


7 7 


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Professional Fraternitie 


Artus 


V- 


Washington University Chapter 



Established 1915 


Active Members 


Joseph A. Bernard, ’17 
Robert W. Brooks, '17 
Irwin K. Cozzexs, '17 
Adolph Drey, '17 
John B. Ewing, ’17 
Alfred H. Finkelstein, ’17 


George S. Metcalfe, A.B., '16 
James A. Preston, ’17 
Irl B. Rosenblum, A.B., ’15 
Frank Scott, ’17 
Chester C. Smithers, ’16 
Edwin R. Thomas, ’17 


Associate Members 


Herbert S. Boettler, A.B., ’15 
Fred W. Boettler, A.M., ’15 
Frank Berryhill, A.B., ’14 
Royal A. Dickie, A.M., ’14 
Charles Dunckkr, Jr., A.B., ’14 
Arthur J. Freund, A.B., ’13 
Dr. William F. Gephart, Ph.D. 

J. Wilbur Gonterman, A.B., ’15 

Robert H. Sparks, 


Roland M. Hoerr, A.B., ’15 
Elmer L. Lacey, B.S., ’14 
Kenneth C. Larkey, A.B., ’15 
Dr. Isaac Lippincott 
Leo McCarthy, A.M., ’13 
Dr. Charles E. Persons 
Milton Russell, A.B., ’15 
Dr. William A. Robinson, Ph.D. 

A.B., ’15 


Artus is an honorary fraternity in Economics and Political Science, election 
to which is based upon the noteworthy work of the members chosen by the 
organization. Selection is made from Juniors and Seniors. 


Page Two Hundred Eighty-one 



























Missouri Beta Chapter 



fessional Fraternities 


Phi Beta Kappa 


Established 1914 


Officers 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Secretary-Treasurer 


George Reeves Tiiroop, Ph.D. 
John Livingston Lowes, Ph.D. 
Chauncey S. Boucher, Ph.D. 


Active Members 


James Francis Abbott, Ph.D. 

Chauncey Samuel Boucher, Ph.D. 

Alan Ditchfield Campbell, A.M. 

Wintiirop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. 

George Irving Dale, Pii.D. 

William Franklin Gefhart, Ph.D. 

Frederick Alden Hall, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D. 
Otto Heller, Ph.D. 

Hunley Whatley Herrington, Ph.D. 

George Oscar James, Ph.D. 

John Livingston Lowes, Ph.D. 

LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D. 


John Richardson Miller, A.M. 

George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. 
William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D. 
William Henry Roever, Pii.D. 
Frederick William Shipley, Ph.D. 
Charles Henry Skinner, A.B. 

Ethel Genevieve Sprague, A.B. 

Carl Stephenson, Ph.D. 

Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. 

Robert James Terry, M.D. 

George Reeves Tiiroop, Ph.D. 
Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph.D. 


Undergraduate Students Elected from the Class of 1917 


Edna de Liniere 
Lucille Bishop 
Emma Vogt 


Miriam Melly Martin 
Stanley Vetsiiurc Friedheim 
Theodore Henry Wensel 
Margaret Frances Johnson 


Phi Beta Kappa is an honorary classical fraternity whose members are chosen 
because of their exceedingly high standard of scholarship in classical subjects. 


Page Two Hundred Eighty-two 

fi91 


.t.riW.LV 





























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Sigma Xi 



Washington University Chapter 


President . 
Vice-President . 
Recording Secretary 
Corresponding Secretary 
Treasurer . 


Professor J. F. Abbott 
Dr. L. B. Alford 
Mr. W. W. Bon ns 
Professor E. A. Burt 
Professor C. H. Danfortii 
Professor Otto Dunicel 
Professor George Dock 
Professor B. M. Duggar 
Professor E. A. Engler 
Professor Joseph Erlanger 
Professor A. E. Ewing 
Mr. G. W. Freiberg 
Mr. C. E. Galt 
Mr. Alfred Goldman 
Professor J. M. Green man 
Professor H. G. Hake 
Dr. W. V. Hoyt 
Professor D. E. Jackson 
Professor G. O. James 
Dr. P. C. Jeans 
Mr. H. M. Jennison 
Mr. G. W. Lamke 
Mr. B. F. Lancreck 
Professor A. S. Langsdorf 
Dr. J. W. Lari more 


Undergraduate Students Elected from the Class of 1917 


Leslie Myron Bare 
Albert Eli Goldstein 


The Society of Sigma Xi is an honorary society, election to which, from faculty 
and alumni, is based upon noteworthy achievement in some branch of pure or 
applied science, and from graduate students and Seniors, upon promise of ability in 
scientific endeavor. 


Page Tzoo Hundred Eighty-three 






















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Honorary Prater nit 



Alpha Omega Alpha 



\f<of u^c/Uiv roiif afyoCirrac 


Missouri Alpha Chapter 


Established 1905 


Fratres in Facultate 


E. L. Shi-:ahan, M.D. 

W. E. Fischel, M.D. 
Llewellyn Sale, M.D. 

H. McClure Young, M.D. 

C. A. Gunpelach, M.D. 

R. S. Wiess, M.D. 

Harvey O. Lamb, M.D. 
Seltg Simon, M.D. 

H. S. Greditzer, M.D. 

L. B. Alford, M.D. 

J. W. Larimore, M.D. 

G. E. Hourne, M.D. 

R. A. Gesell, M.D. 

F. Abbott, M.D. 

D. K. Rose, M.D. 

E. H. Schmidt, M.D. 


R. T. Terry, M.D. 

E. L. Oie, M.D. 

N. B. Carson, M.D. 

Ellis Fischel, M.D. 

G. P. Hurford, M.D. 
Barney Brooks, M.D. 
Francis Barnes, M.D. 

E. Lehman, M.D. 

Carl Everbach, M.D. 

F. M. Wilson, M.D. 
Ellsworth Smith, M.D. 
L. H. Fuson, M.D. 

Ernest Sachs, M.D. 

B. S. Veeder, M.D. 

T. C. Hampelmann, M.D. 

H. S. Gasser, M.D. 


Frater in Universitate 

Forest H. Staley, A.B. 

Alpha Omega is an honorary medical fraternity. 


Page Tivo Hundred Eighty-four 



















'''M/S///////////MV//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////^^^ \ 










































































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Sororities 

















































Kappa Alpha Theta 



Alpha Iota Chapter 


Established 1906 


If 

II 


Sorores in Universitate 
Post-Graduate 

Claire Agnes Berry 


Katherine Middleton 
Katherine Brookes 


Helen Ette 
Helen Banister 
Rachel Metcalfe 
Katherine McNulty 


1917 


1918 


Jean Brookes 


Beth Barnett 
Frances Hayes 


Mildred Candy 
Margery Fixigan 
Mary Frances Price 
Armina Pinkle 


1919 

Lucy Taylor 

1920 

Mary Lewis 

Pledged 


Page Two Hundred Eighty-nine 

s2j! 


Lucille Bishop 
Alice Johann 


Jessamine Price 
Margaretha Roth 
Marguerite Zoff 
Frances Wendl 


Etta Reller 


Margaret Howes 
Edith Kidwell 


Mary Skeen 
Anne Study 
Grace Threadgill 
Crenshaw Waller 









































































• ., : .y ; - „ ; 


II 


Sororities 


Pi Beta Phi 



Missouri Beta Chapter 


Established 1907 


Kathleen Lucy 
Agnes Manley 


Sorores in Universitate 
1917 

Clara Parks 


Helen McCargo 
Agusta Parker 


Elsa Eyssell 
June Forshaw 
Helen Johnston 


Dorothy Aylesbury 
Louise Breeding 
Dorothy Brown 
Marian Gardner 
Mildred Hess 
Mary Hope 


1918 


1919 


Evadne Alden 


Zella Bandy 
Anita Herman 


1920 


Jane Durfee Johns 


Pledged 


Page Two Hundred Ninety-one 



Jane Pelton 
Etha Mayo 
Katharine Starbuck 


Dorothy Jacres 
Margaret Martin 
Mildred Smith 
Mildred Wass 
Grace Woods 
Mary Williams 


Dorothy Hackman 


Helen May 
Ruth Moffat 














































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II 

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S o r o r i t i 



Delta Gamma 



Alpha Epsilon Chapter 


Established 1914 


Sorores in Universitate 
1917 


Alice Ernst 
Edith Hammond 

Melba Ryan 

1918 


ISABELL BARREIRAS 
Helen Crawford 
Vera Dauernheim 
Emily Dauernheim 
Elinor Erskine 
Mildred Kaliifleisch 
Marie Maull 


1919 

Mary Blackburn 
Lois Forsythe 
Dorothy Kalbfell 
Helen Kropp 

1920 

Dorothy Hart 

Pledged 

Margaret Braun 
Margaret Greer 
Bonnie Moore 


Dorothy Kremer 
Mary Lee Pickel 


Martha Meysenberg 
Gladys M«one 
Mildred Phelps 
Ruth Rhodes 
Anna Sheppard 
Marjorie Thompson 
Alice Wills 


Martha Meyer 
Margaretta Rapp 
Louise Luedeking 
Lillian Stupp 


Celeste Schramm 
Gladys Tate 
Dean Welch 


Special 

Kathryn Loxc.mire 


II 

i i 

II 

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Page Two Hundred Ninety-three 



































































V///////////////////////////////////AY////////////////////s/SSS/SS//s//SS///S/s/s//////////////////s///s//////sssssssss//s/s/ss/sss//s///ss/s//ss////s//////////rfW//// /y/ ' f J '*^^y//s/////////////////////////////////A 


Sororities 


Gamma Phi Beta 



Phi Chapter 


Established 1917 


Sorores in Universitate 
1917 


Elizabeth Baker Margaret Ewing 

Margaret Johnson 

1918 

Elizabeth Callaway Lois Keim 

Mary Callahan Grace Lewis 

Frances Lucas 

1919 

Elizabeth Chapin Lucile Riedel 

Grace Sewing 


1920 


Dorothy Hetlage Josephine Michael 

Julia Jonah Frances Murci-i 

Charlotte Robertson 


Pledged 

Sarah Kennedy 


Page Two Hundred Ninety-five 





























































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Page Tzvo Hundred Ninety-six 

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• ■ • . ■ • • ' .' 




The Year 

HE year, which the Hatchet editors are bound to chron¬ 
icle, has been a very pleasant one. In all things which the 
University students have taken part there has been suc¬ 
cess. But this success has only come as a result of earnest 
endeavor. 

Never has there been greater cooperation between 
faculty, students and alumni than there has been this year. 
The Washington Union has grown from a struggling, embryonic or¬ 
ganization into an established power in all affairs pertaining to the 
University. Through it, University people are enabled to know each 
other's true natures, an opportunity not given to them in the class-room. 

The University staged a great Elizabethan pageant to do Washing¬ 
ton's part in celebrating the Shakespearean Tercentenary in the spring. 
The magnitude of this pageant was unsurpassed by anything attempted 
in the Middle West. Later the Dramatic Club gave its most successful 
annual play and I’ralma staged a Surkuss which has never been equaled 
at Washington. 

This has been a good year in athletics. While the teams have not 
won ail}- championships nor rolled up any tremendous scores, there has 
existed a clean lighting spirit in all branches of sport. The rooters have 
been Washington's pride. The number of students who traveled all 
the wav to Ann Arbor with the football team showed that Washington 
has now as good a supporting student body as any university. 

Throughout the year, clubs which merely existed before at Wash¬ 
ington have awakened from their long sleep and accomplished much, 
through the efforts of two or three active leaders. In fact, it might be 
said that every campus activity and organization had reached its highest 
point of efficiency, March, 1917. 

But as w r e go to press the students’ interest in their own welfare and 
the welfare of the school has lessened. All interest is now bent upon 
the welfare of the nation. And in event the worst should happen and 
the whole country be plunged into a great war, it may be expected that 
the Washington men will do as much for their country as they have 
alwavs done for their school. 


i i 


Pac/c Two Hundred Ninety-nine 


11 












































The Elizabethan Pageant 


VERY college year lias its biggest event. Washington’s 
"biggest event” last year was the Shakespearian Tercen¬ 
tenary Celebration or Elizabethan Pageant. On Thursday, 
April 27, and on Saturday, April 29, "The Old Wives’ 
Tale,” “The Hue and Cry After Cupid,” and the Revesby 
Sword Play, which comprised the pageant, were artistically 
and, above all, successfully produced by the university. 

"The Old Wives’ Tale,” the most elaborate of the three produc¬ 
tions, took place on the main quadrangle, where a huge wooden stage 
had been erected, adjoining Busch Hall. The stage rose some ten feet 
in the air with a gallery and wings towering above. Here, while the 
court ladies in the gallery above smiled and whispered, and the peasants 
below scoffed and prattled, Peele’s play was presented. 

Not far away in McMillan courtyard scenes were different. There, 
in the "Hue and Cry After Cupid," the grace and beauty of the university 
danced about on the greensward, their beauty enhanced by picturesque 
costumes and surroundings. Then followed the Revesby Sword Play, 
particularly pleasing to the public for it was really funny with its Fool, 
Dragon, Pickled Herring, Maid Cecily, and the rest. 

These performances at McMillan were given simultaneously with 
that of the "Old Wives’ Tale." Then followed a brief intermission while 
the two great audiences interchanged. After this the three plays were 
repeated and the pageant closed with the day. 

From the start to the finish the pageant created an Elizabethan 
atmosphere which was well appreciated by most of the spectators. It 
was a rich display of color, a manipulation of talent and training, and 
above all it was purely Washingtonian. But since it is the spectator’s 
opinion that holds, an article from the Drama League Monthly criticis¬ 
ing the Pageant might well be printed here: 

“Perhaps the most important among the many diversions offered 
the delegates at the convention by the St. Louis Center was the perform¬ 
ance of picturesque plays presented under the auspices of the Wash¬ 
ington University and the Washington University Association; namely. 
Peele’s Old Wives’ Tale, the Revesby Swords Play and Ben Jonsou's 
Hue and Cry After Cupid.” 



Page Three Hundred One 







































'""'/////// 


R e v i 



The L nivee Surkuss 


ROM the questionable recesses of Bill McSorley’s Hinges 
of Hell; from the long surface of the slippery slide; from 
the tent which held the Seven Anomalies of the World; 
in fact from every booth and stand on the grounds came 
near profanity as gamblers lost their money, merry shrieks 
as co-eds and co-ops came down the slide arm in arm, and 
the steady monotonous drone of the barkers. These and a 
myriad of other sounds and calls, mingling with the stale odor of hot 
dogs and soda pop, ascended into the air in a voluptuous cadence cre¬ 
ating the intangible atmosphere which was the Surkuss of 1016. 

Threatened at first by the wind and by potential rain clouds Pralma’s 
frolic turned out to be what was and what will be for a long time gen¬ 
erally conceded the best Surkuss ever held on the campus. To enum¬ 
erate all the shows would require too great space. The Surkuss must be 
recounted, as it will be remembered, only as a whole. 

Miss Margaretha Roth was elected Queen at the voting booth, 
which has customarily been a part of the Lock and Chain contribution. 
Beside the voting booth, the Sophomore society gave a dance after the 
Surkuss and operated a sort of a ducking pond, and ■‘one-nigger-baby- 
down-one-cigar” game in which, if the ball were pitched accurately, a 
member of the Lock and Chain was precipitated into a tank of water 
underneath. 

The Architects, as usual, presented a burlesque show. However, it 
proved a disappointment to many of the masculine visitors. The sug¬ 
gestiveness of the name caused not a few men to eschew the company 
of their ladies for a few minutes at the Persian Burlesque; but it was 
not that kind of an exhibit. The Seven Anomalies of the World consist¬ 
ing of the shortest and tallest men in the world, a Hula-Hula dancing 
girl, a three-legged woman, an iron-jawed woman, an eater of safety 
razor blades and the missing link, enjoyed tremendous popularity. Simi¬ 
larly the Engineers’ Vaudeville and the Pre-Medics’ futuristic surgery 
corralled not a few of the furtive shekels. There were even games of 
chance where you might lose your money—if such expedients were nec¬ 
essary. 

But the lure of the movies inherent to the Twentieth Century 
caused crowds to fill the concession of Thyrsus in every one of its seven 
or eight shows. The members of Thyrsus showed convincingly that 
their abilities were not confined to the legitimate drama but extended 
also to the movie field. "The Maid of McMillan” was Thyrsus’ first 
venture into the realm of cinemetography; and, indeed, one of the first 
films that any college dramatic club has produced. As characterized by 
a gushing Freshman girl, the movie show was “perfectly darling.” And 
so it was. 

So was the whole Surkuss—with some modifications. 

Page Three Hundred Three 


» MAJ • • •-•VOi'V’/'.V.V 
































ITH the aid and financial support of the Union, the Bon¬ 
fire this year was a great deal of a success. Bonfires for 
years at Washington have been desultory affairs. A few 
students have each time fought their way near to the fire 
through several hundred yards of very wet mud, listened 
to a few speeches which were not astonishingly clever, 
eaten a few half-cooked hot dogs, and then gone home 
with the feeling that they might have spent a much more enjoyable 
evening at a moving picture show. 

This year the Union staged a trick athletic meet in the Gymna¬ 
sium before the fire was lighted. There were all kinds of events, from 

a boxing match to a pie-eating contest. After this, the mud outside 
didn’t seem so bad, the speeches didn't seem so poor or the food so 

underdone. The whole affair was well managed and quite typical of 

Washington spirit. 


St. Fatima’s Day 


According to their custom the Architects, on January 24, prayed 
long and earnestly to Allah for aid in the coming mid-year examinations. 
Their prayers and rites marked the annual celebration of St. Fatima’s 
Day. There was the usual train of Oriental servants, dancers, and dig¬ 
nitaries. St. Fatima awoke to her annual kiss, prayed to Allah, and 
departed to her Oriental seclusion for another year. The dancing of 
the five royal dancers was declared to be the best seen out of the Im¬ 
perial Russian Ballet. Members of the faculty were present by proxy 
and offered explanations and apologies for their evil deeds. 


' 1 

B-f M Or 



I'aye Three Hundred Four 

fl91 






































R e v 1 


M cMillan Vaudeville 




HE program for the annual McMillan Vaudeville consisted 
of six acts. There was everything in the theatrical line, 
from a direful tragedy to a sentimental dance by the ail¬ 
ments of Spring. These were staged by the girls of 
McMillan Hall, Y.W.C.A., and members of the four 
sororities. Three hundred people were jammed into the 
narrow coniines of the Thyrsus Theater to witness the 
clever productions 

A one-act comedy entitled “A Victrola Shop,” put on by the girls of 
McMillan. 

This was followed by real musical talent displayed on the wonderful 
zymphony zarcheztree of the Thetas. 

In deep contrast to these two "stunts” was a clever "take-off” en¬ 
titled, “The Tremendous Tragedy of Dido, Queen of Carthage,” written 
and staged by members of Tau Upsilon. 

Spring fever, coughs, grippe, measles, mumps and influenza featured 
the Deta Gamma contribution, “Around the World with Spring.” 

Pi Beta Phi came next with "Wanted—a Wife.” Applicants were 
shown who answered a young man’s advertisement in the morning paper 
for a wife. 

The last act of the day by Y.W.C.A. was "Twelfth Hour,” hy 
Shakesbeer. The scene of the outrage was laid in the campus of the 
University of Padua, during a chapel hour in mediaeval days. 


Dandelion Day 



Page 


UCH excitement occurred Dandelion Day, May 13, 1916, 
when a few live spirits of the Freshmen Class insisted on 
polling their votes for Mr. Willys Bliss as Freshmen 
Queen. These Freshmen worked with such ardor that for 
a longtime Mr. Bliss easily outdistanced the field of blush¬ 
ing candidates at the polls. 

Finally Clifford Taussig, President of the Student 
Council and master of the voting, raised his hand aloft and shouted, “No 
more votes will be counted for Mr. Bliss.” His zealous supporters 
grumbled a bit, muttered something about "a big crook,” then transferred 
their affections to another lady. 

Miss Margaret Woods and Miss Mildred Wass fought it out count 
by count then until twelve o’clock. The vote then showed that Miss 
Wass had won by a small margin and she was accordingly crowned 
queen. 

It is worth the trouble to be President of the Student Council when 
it comes to crowning Dandelion Day Queens. 

Three Hundred Five 











































Junior Prom Reflections 

EN o’lock Saturday morning, February 17, the little fellow 
with the close-cropped hair sat up in bed, yawned once or 
twice, and then grinned. He knew the 1918 Junior Prom 
had been a huge success. None of his wires supporting the 
ceiling had broken. He was happy. At various other 
places, Other members of the Prom Committee were 
waking up and sighing with relief because their fuses 
had not blown out, or their lattice work had not fallen down, or their 
refreshments had not given out. For this reason they knew that the 
Prom was a success. But these little items must not be given room in 
the writing about the Prom. The names of the fellows who crawled out 
on those narrow beams will not long be remembered; but the dance itself 
— that’s a different thing. 

In the first place, kind Providence allowed the Prom to occur this 
year on a night when the weather conditions could not have been bet¬ 
tered. For the first time there was no blizzard or rainstorm. This was 
a pleasing novelty. As a result, the largest Prom crowd in the history 
of the University assembled at the Gymnasium. 

Then the decorations were altogether pleasing. A great elaboration 
was not attempted. A simple, well-worked-out color scheme made the 
Prom the more beautiful by its absolute simplicity. Snow was every¬ 
where. It covered the lattice work, the pine boughs, the great dead 
branches and, later on the dress clothes. Over all, the pale blue skv 
canopied the floor with its twinkling stars and wide blue expanses. It 
was indeed beautiful. Too much credit cannot be accorded to those who 
worked out this effect. 

At eleven-thirty, refreshments were served. Then came the big sur¬ 
prise of the evening. The lights did not start to flicker and go out at 
twelve o’clock. Through permission of Dean McCaulley and Chancellor 
Hall, the dance was allowed to continue until one-thirty. This probably 
was the greatest hit of the evening. 

When the orchestra had finally played the last few bars of “Home, 
Sweet Home” and the last stag had cut in on the fellows who had 
imported a queen all the way from Granite City, the 1918 Junior Prom, 
which even the Seniors admitted was a rather successful one, was over. 



Page Three Hundred Seven 


























MAT DAY 


PAGEAMT 


Page Three Hundred Eight 




















McMillan May Day 


-IAT HAPPENED IN THE GLEN,” the May Day play, 
was artistically staged on the afternoon and evening of 
May 17. In spite of the time spent on the Elizabethan 
Pageant this year, the seventy girls who took part entered 
into the traditional event with such hearty enthusiasm that 
it resulted in the most successful as well as the most 
popular May Day fete that has ever been produced by the 
University. It was a beautiful play laid in fairyland, por¬ 
traying the struggle of a fairy’s love against that of a mortal. The action 
is based on the conquest of an Eastern talisman which is supposed to 
bring the possessors wealth, power and happiness. 

The prologue introduces Marieta, queen of the Eastern fairies, curled 
up in a crocus cup, fast asleep. On awakening she is seized by a huge 
cricket who holds her until Petie, an English soldier, rescues her. The 
play then opens with the entrance of Jacelyn and Madge, who tell of the 
arrival of the English fairies with the talisman, which they have stolen 
from a band of eastern fairies. It is to be brought to the glen that very 
night where the soldiers are to guard it. The soldiers enter and with 
them come the villagers who join in a sprightly dance and soon hurry 
away. Two soldiers, Petie and Will, are left to guard the stolen treasure, 
but Marieta enters and soon charms them into a deep sleep by her sleep- 
dance. Marieta again dances before the talisman, this time joined by 
her loyal subjects, the eastern fairies. As they are about to depart with 
this priceless charm. Marjorie and her band of English fairies appear 
and demand that a chance be given to show themselves worthy of keep¬ 
ing the talisman. Marieta tells them that such a thing is impossible until 
one of the eastern fairies falls in love with an English mortal. It is then 
that she realizes that she is in love with Petie, one of the sleeping soldiers 
who rescued her from the cricket. So the talisman is returned to the 
English fairies who have rightfully won it and the spirits of the East 
retire. 



Co-eds of the 


Payc Three Hundred Nine 





























Review 


A Football Mass Meeting 


T about eight o’clock there is somewhat of shouting. Some¬ 
one sticks his head out of the Kappa Sig windows and 
blows a goodly blast on the famous old trombone. The 
cornetist among the Sig Nus begins to play his instrument 
violently. Then of a sudden the crowd realizes that there 
is a football mass meeting that night. They rush wildly 
to the Gym. 

Now is the time when the band assembles. The band is usually 
composed of about twenty-nine Dents and two or three College men. 
It has never been fully explained why the Dents are always the musicians, 
but it seems that they are. Why should a man who expects to spend 
the greater part of his later life with his fingers in some other person’s 
mouth, learn to play the flute. It beats us. 

At 8:15, all the athletes who have never seen the inside of a 
gymnasium before, are busy throwing baskets, pulling chest weights 
and swinging on the rings. This is another strange thing that has 
never been explained to us. Why is that, when the gymnasium is open 
nearly always for athletic purposes, these fellows take pleasure in show¬ 
ing their gymnastic prowess only when the gym. is used for something 
else. 

W ell, pretty soon the Glee Club assembles and breaks forth into 
song. Remember, football meetings are held early in the fall, so the 
Glee Club isn’t really so good as it will be later on. In fact, they say 
the inside of the gym. is an awfully poor place to sing. 

The President of the Student Council arises and says, “Fellows, 1 
guess you know why I called you together out here. (Great applause. 
This is the cleverest speech the President has ever made.) 1 guess 
you know the team’s going to beat St. Louis to-morrow. (Loud and 
continued applause. This is great. Someone must have written it for 
him.) But all you fellows have gotta come out and help ’em do it. 
(Say, hoy, this is a speech. Where did he ever get it?) But I'm not 
going to talk any longer. (A great burst of applause.) I'm going to 
ask somebody you all know to speak to you. Coach Edmunds is here 
and is going to address you.” 

Cheers are given for the Coach. The crowd is all with the Coach, 
lie is too big to be against. He comes forward and stands with his 
hands in his hip pockets. 

“Fellows, you know I’m not much on talking. (Oh. you modest 
old thing.) But first I want to say that compulsory gym. work will 



Page Three Hundred Ten 

































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i>egin next week for Sophomores and Freshmen. Credit will be given 
for this work. No one can graduate without these credits. (By this 
time the crowd is fairly bubbling over with enthusiasm.) I want all 
you fellows who are signed up for the swimming pool to hand in your 
pledges this week. (At this time the crowd’s enthusiasm knows no 
bounds.) Our team is pretty well shot to pieces this year and 1 don’t 
know what we’ll do to-morrow, but next year we’re going to have a 
fine team.” (The crowd all cheer because thev are intensely interested 
in next year just at present.) 

The Coach shuffles back into the crowd and the President arises 
again. "1 see an old fellow back there in the crowd,” he says, ’'that 1 
know you will all be glad to hear talk. Fellows, I’m going to call on 

Snoozer speaks: ’‘Fellows, I played back here in ’Ox and I guess 
you know what we did to St. Louis. We trotted out on the field with 
half the team on crutches and the other half had their arms in a sling. 
Talk about equipment! We didn’t even have pants. But boys, we 
sure went after their hide. They only beat us 78 to 0, but that didn’t 
half show the relative merits of the teams — they should have heat us 
156 to 0. 1 remember what a game little Parvus Puer played that day. 

He was our quarterback and only weighed 101 in his overcoat. When 
he caught a punt he used to have to throw out an anchor to keep it 
from carrying him back over the goal line. But I won't talk any more. 
Pm going to be out there to-morrow and 1 don’t want to see any Wash¬ 
ington man leave the field until he has six St. Louis scalps hanging to 
his belt.” (Great Cheers.) 

The band begins to play. The students fall in line and march to 



Garavelli’s. 

Such is a mass meeting, 
much to live for. 


Pat/e Three Hundred Eleven 










































®i)t Class Scrap 

ilet CljlS $l)otogralmre 
CPcr Commemorate 
Cl ic ClaS£ ifcrap of tpe l£car 1016. 
iffilucl) ©nfaPorablc Comment antedated 3r. 

Jttucii enthusiasm Accompanied 3t. 
i^luct) ftecuperation tnajtf Reeded after 3t. 

But $cherthcie£s tills gcrap fteallp happened. 

Jfrom iJioto ©ntil tlic t£nd ofClme Chose 3Ul)o participated In 3t 
Can Cell Chelr jFollolncrs of tile Crand CMd g>crap of 1016. 


Page Three Hundred Twelve 






























Review 



The Michigan Trip 

NCI-', the time that a dozen or so fellows battled their wav 
from St. Louis to Crawfordsville, the desire to follow the 
team has been growing among the students at Washington. 
This year that desire reached its maximum when it was 
necessary to procure a whole train to carry the bunch up 
to Ann Arbor, Michigan. 

This was probably the most-talked-of event of the 
year. The fellow who took the leading part in the Thyrsus Annual was 
of little consequence in the eyes of the boys when compared to the man 
who took the porter’s cap on the Michigan train. Fellows who slept 
side by each in an upper berth of a Tourist car felt more bound together 
than those bound by the mystical rites. And say. how the boys did learn 
to appreciate the girls who had brought food with them. 

The trip was not luxuriously comfortable. In fact, when there are 
two yelling, roughhousing people to every lower and two growling, fight¬ 
ing people to every upper berth, the chances are that there will be some 
little discomfort. Of course, there was no diner on the train, which made 
it rather uncomfortable on the return trip when the train did not get in 
until three in the afternoon. But it was these same discomforts which 
made the trip a huge success. 

If it had been a sober, luxurious, fat old gentleman’s trip, we would 
have had no tales to hand down to posterity. Now we may always be 
able to sit down at any time and narrate at length concerning “them 
grand old days” when the whole campus emigrated to Michigan in the 
wake of the team. 



Pugc Three Hundred Thirteen 


























































































































Review 


An Illustrated Life of Ben Schulze 




ULL many a year ago there was born in a small frame 
house on the very northernmost extremity of St. Louis 
(then but a small river town without even a Lock and 
Chain) a small, chubby-faced youngster, who from the 
very first minute of his existence began to exhibit an 
amazing amount of intelligence and precocity. His doting 
parents almost immediately named him Ben, adding, of 
course, the family name Schulze as a matter of form. 

Little Ben, for that is what everyone called him, soon learned to put 
forth all that was in him in whatever he undertook. Glance for a moment 
at the upper picture on the opposite page. Notice how the little man 
holds his mouth, nose and eyes well open, his arms pressed firmly to his 
sides and his feet at an angle of one hundred and eighty degrees to each 
other. The signs of active greatness were even then cropping out. 

We next see little Ben when he has grown from babyhood into 
young striplinghood. He has gone in for manly sports, for he seems 
to always carry a hoople with him. Indeed, it is said that at this time 
Ben was so often with his hoops that he contracted a slight ulceration of 
the lungs which later developed into a disease which is known as the 
“hoopin’ - cough, a very rare disease almost unknown in these times. It 
was at this time that Ben began to show the first signs of a keen insight 
into the affairs of men. Once Ben picked up a small rock and hit the 
iceman in the head with it. When the uproar had subsided, friends asked 
of little Ben why he had done it. “I wanted to sec if it would hurt him,” 
answered the little fellow. All marveled at the child's sagacity. 

But as Ben grew older he was not content with the pleasures of his 
childhood. He thirsted for greater worlds to conquer. He desired to 
become a civil engineer. (At this time he had never heard of Applied 
Mechanics or Qualitative Analysis.) He had a vision in which he saw 
himself conquering Washington University as he had conquered the 
Alley Rats. So packing his little nightie and toothbrush in a red kerchief 
and putting on his only suit of neatly patched brown homespun, he set 
out for the great University. 

Four years elapse and we see in the last picture, Ben the Scholar, 
Ben the Leader — Ben the Man. He stands at ease in front of University 
Hall in his neat blue outing suit. No more is he known as Little Ben. 
The youth who once rolled hooples and had pictures taken while bare¬ 
foot, now stands before us in an easy but firm pose, the nostrils dilated, 
the hands along the pant seams and the legs crossed diagonally in front 
to hide the hole in the stocking. Conquered worlds are placed at his feet. 
Nothing is above his shoulders. 


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Review 



Unknown Clubs At Washington 


L. M. Bare 
E. Benway 


THE OWL CAR CLUB 

Founded in 1904 

Frater in Facilitate 

Philip Sieberth 

Fratres in Universitate 

1917 

1918 

Norman W. Pemberton 

1919 


George Williams 


Ben Roberts 
Stanford Hollocher 

\V. Stuart 


Pledged 

C. Stapleton 


Adolf Drey 

H. C. Venable 
T. T. Burke 


THE ROLLING CUBES 

Founded in 1912 by L. B. Brown 

Fratres in Facultate 
No, of Course Not. 
Fratres in Universitate 

1917 

Frank Scott 

1918 


Ed Nix 
J. J. Sharon 


1919 

Pledged 

Thomas H. Wagner, Jr. 

THE LIT’RY LITES 

Founded 1912 

Frater in Facultate. 

C. J. Masseck 

Fratres in Universitate 

1917 

1918 

1919 

T. Dawson 

1920 


Ray Peters 

T. Phiambolis 
Richard Jones 


Geo. Nagle 
Y. Parkinson 


FI. Poole 

Page Three Hundred Sixteen 



































Is this a riot? 

Oh, No. 

This is just the Engineers at Work. 

They are getting data. 

At the end of the afternoon they will know something. 

So would we all if we went out windy afternoons with 
big telescopes. 

The Prof, passing by wonders why the Students do not 
work with such ardor in his Descriptive Geometry Class. 

It has been a long time since he was young and red- 
blooded. 

Good ol’ Washington pep. 


Page Three Hundred Seventeen 






































































































































































Frosh Letter Home 


Washington University, 

Oct. 3, 1916. 

Dear Ma: 

I am enjoying my first few days here at the Dromedaries very 
much. So far I have been very fortunate in securing necessaries very 
cheaply. You remember that beautiful yellow radiater which was in my 
room. Well last night I rented it so that I can have it all this year 
Last night Mr. Busiek and Mr. Schwartzenbach, the fellows who had 
this room last year, came in and started to take it out. I offered 
them ten dollars if they would let it stay. They thought about it a 
while then said they’d let me have it for five if I would promise not 
to turn on the heat on cold nights. 

Today I got my Chapel tickets from Ralph Hill. He let me have 
them cheaper as he said he comes from Arkansas too and us Arkans must 
all stick together. With these tickets I can get in Chapel every Wed¬ 
nesday free and if the choir sings more than once I get ten cents 
back. The season ticket saves you about four dollars. 

I made several purchases from a senior named Lee Harrison. He has 
a fine stock of college clothes which he sells to Freshmen every year. 
I bought a pair of high boots from him which he says everybody needs 
for the heavy snows and when passing the Law School. He says he will 
let me have a Ladies Embalmers sign for a double barreled shot gun. 
Please send me my gun right away. 

Fat Hastings who is in his second year here lives right near me. 

He has invited me to a party which the Sophomores are giving to the 
Freshmen tonight. He says the Sophomores give a party to certain 
Freshmen in the fall of every year and he says I am the very kind of a 
Freshmen they like. He told me to wear plenty of old clothes. I think 
that I will wear my new suit. It's always well to look decent you know. 

So far I have subscribed to a number of University publications; 
Student Life, The Hatchet, The Eliot Magazine and the University 
Catalog. I don't know when I will have time to read all these but I 
must show my school sprit and subscribe. Also Geo. Nagel, a business¬ 
like young fellow, is offering me a typewriter if I sell two subscrip¬ 
tions for the Eliot and collect the money. 

Tell Mr. Woodruff at High School that I haven't done much debat¬ 
ing yet as the fellows up here aren't so very enthusiastic over it. 

I shall organize a Ciceronian Society later. 

Good-by 
John. 

P.S. I think I need a little more money very much. 


Page Three Hundred Nineteen 






























S3 


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H ovv They Get Them 


KAPPA ALPHA.—The cringing rushees are marched to the rooms 
in regular formation. Walter Bode sits at the piano stool and Cliff 
Taussig lays on the top of the piano with his guitar. They play madly. 
The rushees are ragged to the ragged edge of pledgment. If any further 
inducements are needed the rushees are taken out to look at Ed Thomas' 
house. 


SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON.—The parties are always held on Tues¬ 
day so as not to interfere with high school fraternity meetings. Charley 
Johann and Sam Foote appear at seven-thirty with fifteen picked from 
the best, the very best, of Soldan High School. A short but snappy 
minstrel show is then given by the Sig Alph freshmen. Freddy Schwarz 
and P. Meier are overcome and run shrieking from the room at ten 
o clock. Tom Dawson and Pete Johnson lead the regular ones out into 
the night when things begin to drag. 


BETA THETA PI.—The youths are slowly hauled to the rooms in 
Henry Duncker’s machine until they all arrive about half past ten. From 
this time on they are shown Beta alumni from Dog Krause to David R. 
Francis until they reach a very receptive state of mind. The brothers 
then sing suggestive songs about “You’d Better Come and Pledge Now.” 
until a late hour. 


THETA XI.—Everyone appears in old clothes. The brothers who 
are members of the football and basket-ball teams stand at the doorway. 
The other brothers and the rushees form in line outside the door. The 
evening is spent in determining whether the athletes can keep the others 
out of the rooms. Meanwhile, Ben Roberts manipulates the player-piano 
in good style. 


Page Three Hundred Twenty 





















* " •.•tv? 





ALPHA KAPPA DELTA.—Here is where the high school boy gets 
his first taste of real college life. While the rushees sit around and gaze 
admiringly at Tom Horn’s exquisite new lilac socks, Syl Horn, the 
Douglas brothers and Fred Jostes render good old college songs, in true 
harmony. Herb Bryant impersonates the rough college husky and Coeur 
de Lion Addington shows the latest dancing steps in his boy scout suit. 


PHI DELTA THETA.—Each rushee is first initiated into all the 
mysteries of Lee Harrison’s room. This takes up a lot of time. Then 
Poge Lewis is exhibited for at least an hour. Then if it isn’t late enough 
for Frank Scott to begin the serious stuff, Shorty Hill gives the Arkansas 
laugh until things are set nicely. The party is then a success if Jim 
Preston doesn’t put in his appearance. 


KAPPA SIGMA.—At a given signal, the bunch divides into two 
squads. Pete Pemberton, Hollocher, Venable and Leschen take the 
boys from McKinley and Yeatman into Stewart’s room and tell them 
about the grand old days. Copies of Jack Powell’s picture are passed 
out. Ed Nix, Hixon Kinsella, Kendall Harrison take the remainder 
into the quiet ante-room and discuss fluently the influence of Words¬ 
worth on modern poetry. Copies of the “Eliot Magazine” are passed 
out. Stupp sits about with a far away look on his face. 


SIGMA NU.—Someone plays “Oh, Johnny” on the piano for two 
hours and a half. The members laugh loudly and join in the chorus at 
the end of each verse. When this program is finished, it is repeated 
again. And so on. 


SIGMA CHI.—The victrola is set going early in the afternoon so 
that it may have a running start at the rushees. Wyllys Bliss begins to 
follow it on the mandolin as soon as the first of the uninitiated put in 
their appearance. If this music does not subdue the bunch inside of an 
hour, a hurry call is sent for Harry Payne. Oyster patties and hot coffee 
are served. The Sig Chis are strong on food. 























Review 



Military 

HE calling of the Washington members of the First Regi¬ 
ment to the colors on Monday, March 26, brought home 
vividly to the University the international situation and its 
effect on Washington. Before noon plans were made for 
a mass meeting on Francis Field. The news spread 
quickly over the campus and it was estimated that two 
hundred and twenty of the two hundred and eighty men 
on the hill reported. The men were quickly divided up into squads 
and assigned to some man who had had training. Francis Field was 
dotted with clumps of men marching and countermarching, practicing 
turns, standing at attention, in short, doing things that were strange 
and about which they had only a slight knowledge. 

When it was learned that the faculty were to meet that evening, 
i umors as to what was to be done flew about the campus. Some said 
that the University was to be closed, others that military training would 
immediately be started. On the bulletin boards the next morning was 
posted the notice that all those enlisting would be given credit for the 
semester’s work and Seniors, in good standing, would receive their 
degrees. Mystery, however, still remained. It became known that the 
faculty had made certain recommendations to the Corporation. 

Drills were again held on Wednesday and Friday afternoons with 
the same enthusiastic response from the students. ’ The faculty and 
YY ashington’s foreign students were also represented. 

While waiting for news of the Corporation's actions, nothing but 
war talk went the rounds of the University. Wherever a flag could he 
secured it was hung from a window. I he walls of the dormitories were 
gat' with colors. On Friday, the architects paraded on the Quad, with 
their T-squares on their shoulders. Standing at attention before Cupples 
I, a flag was slowly raised to the top of a staff which they had placed 
there. 

Announcement was made on Saturday morning that an officers’ 
training corps would be established and a military training course of two 
years would be elective. 



Page Three Hundred Twenly-two 




































Student Members of the National Guard Who 
Answered the call to the Colors 


March 26, 1917 

Captain Meston Holmes, ’18 
Lieutenant Humphrey Price, ’17 
Lieutenant Vernon Parkinson, ’18 
Lieutenant H. Clark Venable, ’18 
Lieutenant Otis E. Keough, ’19 
William Eliot, ’18 
David Leavitt, ’19 
John Moll, ’17 
Richard Stark, ’20 
John Singer, ’20. 

Farlow Burt, ’18 
Paul Marsii, ’18 
Reed Barrett, ’19 
Charles Newport, '18 
Ray MacFarland, ’17 
Lee Harrison, ’17 
Harold Holland, ’18 
Ben Schulze, '17 
Russell Horsefield, '20 
Russell Jolley, ’17 
John Spargo 



I’atjc Three Hundred Twenty-three 


































Review 



L’Envoi 


In the pages which have gone before, we have faithfully tried to gather together 
those things of interest and importance which have happened at Washington during 
the past year and shape them into an annual for those of us to wh'pm they have meant 
so much. We have put forth every effort to avoid mistakes in names, cuts and 
records. If there he any such, we are sorry. There are many chances for improve¬ 
ment, each year, in a book of this sort, and in seeking to realize them, we have made 
many changes in form. We have, above all else, tried to make this volume interesting 
and it is our desire that we shall have pleased everyone. 



S^jyuyi 


Editor-in-Chief 



Business Manager 


This book is nearly finished 
And we fully realize 
That all your lives and images 
Are set before your eyes. 

So if some point you do not like 
Comes under your detection, 
Please realize this is no knock 
But merely a reflection. 


Prints of photographs appearing in the Photographic Section of this ‘‘Hatchet’’ may 
be secured from Dan Bartlett, Staff Photographer. 


Page Three Hundred Twenty-four 


























APRIL 

1 McMillanites stage vaudeville show. 
Pi Phis present fantasy entitled, 
“Wanted — a Wife.” 

Engineers take Sherman literally in 
War Pageant. It was that kind of 
a war. 

Engineers banquet refutes that “civ¬ 
ilized” idea. 

4 Alice Johann and Gordon Sommers 
star in “Mrs. Dot,” Thyrsus annual. 
6 William Howard Taft lectures at 
chapel and shakes hands with Col¬ 
onel Boorstein. Beef and Bull. 
Phi Beta Kappa elects. 

In looking through the pages which follow it is hoped that every 
student will remember that the firms which favored us with an adver¬ 
tisement made it possible for this book to be published, and deserve much 
consideration on that account alone. They advertised because they want 
—and expect—the favor of Washington students, and we cannot expect 
them to continue to advertise unless they receive this favor. It is thus a 
matter of college spirit, as well as fairness to the advertiser, to give 
your patronage, whenever possible, to the firm which advertises in a 
university publication. By making use of the Classified List of Adver¬ 
tisers to be found in the back of this book, on the bulletin boards, and in 
the Pralma Guide Book, you will be showing the same sort of spirit you 
do by coming out to root for the team. Don’t forget that YOU are one 
of those who can help to make the publication at this university an 
assured success. 


WESTMINSTER LAUNDRY CO. 

4115 OLIVE STREET 


We call at the dormitories three times a week See Our University Agent. 

A Collar Rightly Starched and Ironed has long life — and that’s the way we do it. 


Paper for this book supplied by Acme Paper Co. 
Page Three Hundred Twenty-five 








































































Vacation Trips 

Upper Mississippi 

arc the most unique and delightful of all Vacation Trips. They afford all the charm 
and novelty of Sea or Lake Trips, and none of their danger or monotony. They 
furnish the most picturesque and beautiful scenery, changing every hour. They give 
Kest and Recreation , stimulate the social faculties and in a thousand ways that must 
be experienced to be appreciated, fill every hour with keen delight. 

America’s Grandest WateRail Trip 


By River between St. Louis and St. Paul; 
by Rail between St. Paul, Chicago and St. 
Louis (or reverse direction), only $40 
including meals and berth on Steamer. 

1 his is an ideal trip for Students wishing 
to attend the Summer Session at Wiscon¬ 
sin University. As stopovers are at will, 




the student may go via St. Paul or via 
Chicago, stop over for the term at Madi¬ 
son, Wis., and complete the WateRail 
Trip when the school term is finished. 
On the same trip, one may also stop over 
in Chicago, St. Paul or elsewhere. De¬ 
lightful side trips may also be taken to 
nclude Devil’s Lake and The Dells. 


Georgian Bay Trip 

Steamer from Chicago to Duluth by way 
of Georgian Bay, (including regular 
WateRail Trip) ; railroad and steamer 
fare, meals and berth on steamers, $64.45. 


St. Louis to St. Paul 

(or reverse) and return—Over 1,400 
miles of delightful travel, only $40, in¬ 
cluding meals and berth. $26.14 one way. 


Mark Twain Trips 

St. Louis to Keokuk, Burlington and return. 

Fare, $10 to $12, including meals and berth. 

Big Streckfus Steamboats all completely refitted. Cuisine 
and service vastly improved. Write or call for full particulars. 

Streckfus Steamboat Line 

St. Louis, Mo. 

(For information about the above trip in connection with the Summer Session at 
Wisconsin U., see Johnston G. Craig or any other member of the Hatchet Board) 


You help the Hatchet most by patronizing its advertisers. 

Page Three Hundred Twenty-six 














F. H. WEBER SSL’S 61 

FLORIST 

OUR NEW STORE—Cor. TAYLOR and OLIVE 

We arc local members of the Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association, and will see that 
you receive the best floral service no matter where you wish delivery made in United States 
of America or Canada. 




APRIL 15. 



APRIL 

12 Juniors give Prom. Benefit Dance 

and Vaudeville, where George Con¬ 
rad Nagel makes debut as movie 
hero. 

14 Hachman elected president of 

Athletic Association at election and 
smoker. Varsity men receive 
“W”s. 

15 Track tryouts held. 

18 Sharon picked by Sophomores to 

head Hatchet Board. 

20 “Dents” give annual dance at Fran¬ 

cis Gymnasium. 

24 Sig Chis heat K. As. in first game of 
Pa'n-Hel. series when Ed Byrd un¬ 
derestimates buoyancy of long fly. 

27 Washington “supers” shocks St. Louis 

Press by throwing peanuts at the 
Elizabethan Pageant. 

28 Sophs take Interclass Track Honors. 


MAY 

3 Preston elected Student Life Editor 
George Conrad feels the weight of 
the steam roller. 

Mildred Wass crowned Dandelion 
Queen after Wyliss Bliss is elimi¬ 
nated by the judges. 

5 Victim Doerner breaks up Freshmen 
meeting by elocutionary violence. 


Jos. A. Bernard Co. Every kind of insurance. Pierce Bldg. 


Page Three Hundred Twenty-seven 































































Miss 

Irene Mueller, ’20 

STENOGRAPHER 

Dictation 

Type writing 

Washington University 

Residence, 2222 SULLIVAN AVENUE 


TAXICABS 

AUTO LIVERY 

OF ALL KINDS 
Reasonable Rates 

MARSHALL 

BROTHERS 

DELMAR, near UNION 
Forest 204 Delniar 1465 


The German Mutual Life Insurance Company 

of St. Louis 

INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF MISSOURI 

- ^ 1 8 5 7 ~ - 

Office: 1102-08 Third National Bank Building 
ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 

Subscription ticket No. 25 is good for one 1918 Hatchet. 

Page Three Hundred Twenty-eight 



OHIO ELECTRIC 

“Magnetic Control’’ 

From top to bottom, inside and out, the 
Ohio Electric is practically a hand-made 
car. 

The control system is a patented feature 
and can only be had in an Ohio. 

The Ohio Electric Sales Co. 
5143 DELMAR BOULEVARD 
Forest 1920 








•*>*< 
























































MAY 

6 Knox knocks Washington's Track 
ambitions. Marsh stars for Pikers. 
Pi Phi’s give annual tea fight and 
formal dance. 

10 Univee Surkus scores greatest suc¬ 

cess after being removed by Uni¬ 
versity “Grounder” from the Gym¬ 
nasium Walk to Francis Field. 
Schulze elected head of Student 
Council. 

11 Sigma Xi elections. 

12 Junior House (and Home) Party. 
Union elections held. 

Grandmother’s Day. 

13 Washington wins three-cornered 

track meet — S.I.N.U., McKendree, 
Washington. 

15 “13” men appear on the campus wear¬ 

ing their pins. 

17 Co-eds pose as fairies in “What Hap¬ 

pened in the Glen,” annual May 
Day dance. 

Sophs win track meet from Frosh. 

18 Traditional enemies bury the hatchet 

at Underclass “Love Fest.” 

New and improved 1917 “Hatchet” 
appears. 

“Keod” picks pledges. 

20 Rolla wins Dual Meet from Pikers. 
22 Musical Clubs banquet at Melsheim- 
er’s. 




IN BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF 

Why not be your own employer? We have openings for 
ambitious Washington Graduates desirous of becoming financially inde¬ 
pendent at early date. Let us show you what has been done by- 
Washington men and graduates of other colleges. 

"A Life PFork with Unlimited Future.” 


The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. 


" More 
Than Million 
on IFashington 
Men ” 


s 


TRATFORD 

A1NT 


EE 

0UIS 


M 


ORTON 

ISSOURI 


'PERFECTION in PROTECTION 


M onthly 
Income and 
Business Insurance 
a Specialty 


THIRD FLOOR, CHEMICAL BUILDING 


Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by "W. Schiller & Co. 


Page Three Hundred Twenty-nine 
























MAY 


23 Freddie Schwarz’s swimming meet 
adds to Swimming Pool Fund. 

Phi Delts take Pan-Hell Baseball 
T rophy. 

24 Pralma Pledge Day. 

25 Entire University suddenly stricken 
by severe epidemic of Examinatus. 

Many fatalities. 

29 Dormites give farewell party to 

Frosh Roomers. The Freshmen 
will recover. 

JUNE 

1 Girls’ Tennis Tournament. 

Lock and Chain Pledge dance. 

5 Senior Week begins. 

Girls’ Luncheon and Senioritas im¬ 
personated by underclass hostesses. 

Class Banquet. 

Prizes are announced in some of the advertisements. 

Page Three Hundred Thirty 













































































We FRIEND OF ALL STUDENTS 

The field of invention has never produced anything that adds so much 
to the efficiency of the busy student as the 


Co RoN A 

This perfectly designed 6-pound typewriter performs all the work cf 
30 to 4.5-pound professional machines which cost $100. 

In the Corona you get thorough writing efficiency and perfect mechan¬ 
ical construction. You get all the modern refinements such as two- 
color ribbon, back spacer, paper release, marginal stops, etc. 

But better still—you get the folding portable feature which cannot be 
obtained in any other typewriter. 

The weight of the Corona, including its beautiful carrying case, is 
only 9 pounds. The price, including the case, is but $50. 

Subscription ticket Mo. 365, entitles the holder to a $10 allowance on 
a new $50 Corona, if purchased before June 15th. See ADOLPH 
HOENNY and MAX MUENCH, Special Representatives for Wash¬ 
ington University. 

Sold Exclusively in St. Louis by 

Corona Typewriter Sales Co. 

Olive 3505 408 No. 7th St. 


The Hatchet ticket you bought may be good for one of them. 
Page Three Hundred Thirty-one 

















































• ^KWliU'.WtMiA'hkM . 






Swagger Clothes for Young Men 


The ARMY and NAVY MODELS shown here are exclusive and unusual 


One Price Always 


The New Second-Floor 


Clothes Store 


No Charge for 
Alterations or Delivery 


SANPPERLS 

BETTER CLOTHES 


Southeast Corner OLIVE 
at Seventh 


Take Elevator on Seventh 


Open Saturday Evenings Until Nine 


f ’ ‘v=S 



SEPTEMBER,28. 


28 


JUNE 

6 Class Play—Bill Berry proves “un¬ 
responsive” hero until subjected to 
the charms of Maria Bain, the Girl 
from Mizzo. 

Class Picnic called off on account of 
rain. 


SEPTEMBER 

26 Registration Day. Returning Dor- 
mites fight with the Colonel for 
accommodations. 

Class-room work begins. Not enough 
caps to go around among the new 
arrivals. “Touching” scenes as the 
“Boys from the Border” greet their 
old friends with harrowing tales of 
the heat and thirst of the summer’s 
campaign. Attempts made to sat¬ 
isfy said thirst. 

Freshmen begin wondering when it’s 
going to happen. Sophomores de¬ 
cide to refrain from hazing except 
in “special cases.” 

Old Dormite sell heat, light, bath and 
chapel privileges to Frosh roomers. 
High quality of service at Com¬ 
mons remains unchanged. 
OCTOBER 

1 Co-eds become democratic at Wo¬ 
man’s Athletic Association lunch- 


29 


30 


The Pilgrimage. 

Tree Planting. 

Class Luncheon. 

Seniors win in baseball clash with 
Faculty. 

Phi Beta Kappa Banquet. 
Commencement Exercises. 

Senior Prom. 


eons. 

Ed Byrd announces complete with¬ 
drawal from “social whirl” and 
turns to football for solace. 


BE SURE 

TO READ THE ADS 
AS WELL AS THE CALENDAR 


Are you reading the advertisements? 




Page Three Hundred Thirty-twC 


















j T m in wMn7niivmw i i,iuimi i n i iiMi^«< i iii iii i i iii i i i i i i^M TiiiT fw rf fi r i< ' .,, i t v, l .,wWwv... n ,vww^W f mA..- 



Personal Attention 

is the keynote of 

Wabash 

to Chicago 

Service 

Our patrons are our guests. Con¬ 
ductors, porters, waiters all strive 
to make them feel at home on 
Wabash trains. We are one big 
family—a last growing family. 
Become one of us. 


Four Daily Trains 



9:01a.m. 12:05 noon 9:17 p.m. 11:55 p.m 

Steel parlor car Soli ] iteel Solid steal Steel equipment 

l-v. St. Louis 9:0tn.m. 12:05 noon 9:17 p.m. 11:55 p.m. 

Lv. Delniar Ave.0:18a.nt .D::i2p.m. 

Ar. Chicago 4:53 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 7 ;(HJ it.in. 7:4<la.m. 

Tickets 309 N. Broadway, Union Station 
and Delmar Station. 



1 







Do you insure? See Jos. A. Bernard, Pierce Bldg. 
Three Hundred Thirty-three 



























































Fulfill every demand of the 
Tennis player. 

Do not select a Racket for 
1917 till you have seen 
the new 

MODEL “A.A.A.” 

If your dealer can’t show 
it, write to us. 

The PERFECT Tennis 
Ball is the “AYRES” 
Used the world over by 
Players who know. 

We are sole U. S. 
distributors. 



Biscuit Bon-Bons! 

CHOCOLATE HYDROX: 

A delicious cream filling between 
two chocolate biscuits. 

CLOVER LEAVES: 

Two tender Sugar Wafer Shells 
enclosing a sweet cream filling. 

and 350 other varieties. 

BAKED ONLY BY 

|oosE-\yiLEs Biscuit (^mpany 

Bakers of Sunshine Biscuits 
Brunches in too Cities 


IVritc for catalogue. 

E. I. Horsman Co. 

11-15 Union Sq. W., 
N. Y. CITY. 


gun :!iiiii!iniiin[iiiiimiiiimiii'uii:i!!iiiiiiiimiimuii[iii!iiiiiiiiiimu;tiinini<i'iiimmiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii]iim|^ 

Only Grand Prizes 

| (Highest Award)oiven to J 
| Dictionaries at the 
| Panama-Pacific Exposi- 
| lion was °ranfed /o 

Webster’s 
I New International t 

| For Superiority of Educational Merit. 

| This new creation answers with final author- 1 
| ity all kinds of puzzling questions such as I 
| "How is Przemysl pronounced ? ’ ’ “Where is 1 
| Flanders?” “What is a continuous voyage?” | 
| “What is a howitzer? ” ‘ ‘ What is white coal? ’ ’ g 
1 and thousands of others. 

I More than 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 30 000 Geographi- i 
§ cal Subjects. 12,000 Biographical Entries. 6000 lllustra- g 
tions. 2700 Pages. The only 1 
dictionary with the divided § 
page — a stroke of genius. m 

REGULAR and INDIA- | 
PAPER EDITIONS. | 

Write for specimen pages, i 
illustrations, etc. Free, aset = 
of Pocket Maps if you name § 
this paper. 



G. & C. MERRIAM C0. r | 

Springfield, Mats. 

^uuiHiaiiiiiiuiiniiiMiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitjtiiiimmnuuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiinmiMaunimmmmiiiimimjiimuiui^ 
Do you expect to attend the Slimmer Session at Wisconsin? 



Page Three Hundred Thirty-four 













































\1J 


brack 

7 ' J 
n 




OCT. 5 - 








OCT 4 




OCTOBER 

3 Fraternities exhibit frantic zeal 

in continuous “Rush-Parties.” 
Edmunds hammers the squad into 
shape for the game Saturday. Co¬ 
eds begin turning down dates for 
the seventh Lock and Chain. In¬ 
structors announce that it’s time to 
get down to serious work. The 
Freshmen wonder what it’s all 
about anyway. 

4 Sharon elected President of Juniors 

who join movement for “Preven¬ 
tion of Cruelty to Freshmen.” 

5 Glee Club tryouts held in Gym¬ 

nasium. Several “strong” voices 
appear. 


CORSAGE BOUQUETS 

to please the recipient should be made up of choice flowers, tastefully arranged. Our 
Corsages always please.. Give us a trial at the next dance you attend. 

Prices always right. 

UNIVERSITY TRADE A SPECIALTY. 

Young Bros. Floral Co. 


WATERMAN at BELT 

“The Only Young Bros. Floral Co. in St. Louis.’ 


Cabany 174 


Read the advertisement on page 326. 


Page Three Hundred Thirty-five 































THE MOST POPULAR PLACE NEAR W. U. 

Washington Pharmacy Soda Fountain 

Drop in here at 11:30 any Wednesday to be convinced. 

QUALITY explains the popularity of our Fountain. 

Goods of equal QUALITY are carried in these lines: 

Pennants and Pillow Tops. 

Cameras and Photo Supplies. 

Johnston and Lowney Candies. 

Popular Brands Cigars and Cigarettes. 

Writing Paper, Fountain Pens, and Supplies. 

Our PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT is second to none. 

WASHINGTON PHARMACY 

SKINKER AND BERLIN 

Cabany 1441 Cabany 6050 Delmar 391 




OCTOBER 

6 Drey elected President of the Senior 

Class at meeting, which also elects 
Hughes by “straw vote.” 

Hump Price, fresh from the border, 
enters oratorical fields by speech 
on “Advisory System of Fresh¬ 
men." 

7 Washington romps on Rose Polytech., 

14-0. New Lock and Chain men 
represent the presidential race in 
public initiation at the game. Bryan 
uses Whiskey to revive Peace 
Dove. 

9 Sorority pledge-ribbons appear on 

campus. 

Presidential campaign goes on as be¬ 
fore. 

Lewis elected Freshmen President. 
Pandemonium presides. 

10 Jake Price wins tennis tournament. 

Frank Scott umpires. 

11 Thyrsus tryouts. 

13 Twenty-eight girls follow team to 

Columbia. Team gets there. Dents 
arrive in high spirits. 

14 Tigers get revenge 13-0. Dents keep 

up high spirits. “Greasy Spoon” 
gives “Two to one.”—Byrd pays 
sixty dollars for breakfast. Johnny 
Walker leads cheering. Walker out- 
cheers Mizzo. 

16 Hughes-Lamm-Thompson Club meets 

(itself) in Francis Gym. 


You help the Hatchet most by patronizing- its advertisers. 


Page Three Hundred Tliirty-six 
































Eat a Plate of Ice Cream Every Day! 


Carpenter’s Delicious Ice Cream 

Sandwiches and cakes at the Fountain 


Delmar 2162 
Cabany 2392 


Schvverdtmann’s Drugs 

66th and DELMAR BOULEVARD 


Cabany 2393 
Cabany 2394 


We are agents for Rexall and A. D. S. goods, and carry Paris,Ten Broek, Johnston’s, 
Doll} r Varden and Lowney chocolates. 


A complete line of Camera Supplies 
Everything to be had at a first-class drug store—in clean, fresh condition. 


Hairdressing 
Manicuring 
Facial Massage 
Shampooing 


Marcel Wave 
Scalp Treatment 
Child’s Hair Cutting 
Violet Ray Treatment 


Maison Blanche 

Beauty Shop 

EXPERTS IN ALL 
KINDS OF HAIR WORK 


Bell Phone, Cabany 46 


282 SKINKER ROAD, SAINT LOUIS 


For Real Satisfaction, Patronize 

KUNTZM ANN’S 

6192 Delmar 

(Near Skinker) 

The 100% Clean and Sanitary Barber 
Shop. Only 5 blocks from the 
University. 

For Your Personal Appearance, Use 
LIQUID CO L D C R E A M 
25c a bottle. A delicate cmolient 
for daily use. 

GENUINE EGG SHAMPOO 

35c a bottle; good for 80 sham¬ 
poos for a man, or 40 for a lady. 

Let me prove it. 

Prepared by 

H. H. KUNTZMANN 

6192 DELMAR BOULEVARD 


Jos. A. Bernard Co. Every kind of insurance. Pierce Bldg. 


Page Three Hundred Thirty-seven 




















D 

6 


OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER 

1918 

HATCHET 


3826 

OLIVE STREET 


BELL, LINDELL 2015 
KINLOCH, DELMAR 2027 


Paper for this book supplied by Acme Paper Co. 


Page Three Hundred Thirty-eight 


































south 

WOODS 


piTCH your tent 

where stately pine 
trees lend a fragrance to 
invigorating breezes and 
swirling streams abound 
in gamy fish. 

Spend your summer 
in the cool North Woods. 
You’ll learn to love the 
vastness and solitude — the 
streams and forests — the 
lakes and hills. 




/\nd wnen you go 
north—go with speed and 
comfort. Use the 


to CHICAGO 


The line that has revolutionized travel facilities between 
St. Louis and Chicago. Fan cooled trains leave St. Louis at 9:03 
p. m., 9:04 a. rn. and 11:59 p. m. 

We will be pleased to furnish you with complete travel information. 

CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS RAILROAD 

322 N. Broadway, Phones: Central 314, Main 3390 
F. J. DEICKE, General A£ent Passenger Department 





U11 

I 

' 



Subscription ticket No. 122 is f?ood for one 191S Hatchet. • 


'</ i/c Three Hundred Thirty-nine 




















Originators of New Ideas 

KALISCH BROS. 
FLORAL CO. 

INCORPORATED 

Our Specialty: 

ARTISTIC BOUQUETS and 
CORSAGES 

Decorations For All Occasions 

4506-08 DELMAR BOULVEVARD 
ST. LOUIS, MO. 



specialize in exclusive 
i fo:iet '/iciides andsArii/ices 
needs ancl we 
smJif^youio Inspect 
'■one (ti-splau circitp 
. T'/sw Hope 



*Dyeing and Gleaning Co. 

Have Your Suits Boiled in Gasoline 
By Our Patented 

Boiled In Gasoline 

Process. We Assure You of a Thorough 
Cleaning. 

Pressing Done in One Day. 

I hone l>s and IFe Fall for Shoe Repairing. 

Photo supplies for the Hatchet 


Schwarz & Masters 

(formerly Schwarz &• sons) 

CATERERS 
6005 Kingsbury Blvd. 

Guests at your dances are bound to be 
pleased— if the refreshments come from us. 

T lie fraternity or sorority meeting will 
be a complete success— if we furnish the 
ice cream and cake. 

// e supplied the refreshments for the 
Junior Prom. 


furnished by AT. Schiller & Co. 

Page Three Hundred Forty 















































©CTOBE.e.19. 


UNION 


OCTOBER 

17 Obelisk holds smoker. Hammond, 
Bliss and Cozzens string ’em along. 

18 Henry Duncker elected Sophomore 
President. 

19 Dawson-Shanley pie-eating contest 
fascinates Co-eds. Union raises 
$5,000 for swimming pool fund. 

20 Lock and Chain Initiation Dance. 
“Diamonds in the rough” appear. 

21 Drake cooks Pikers’ goose, 13-0. 
Theta Pledges “entertain” at Wash¬ 
ington Terrace. 

23 Sophomores interest Freshmen in 
Pralma rules. Faculty urges de¬ 
corum. 

If You Contemplate a Journey, Consider the 

Solid All-Steel Trains 

of the 

Illinois Central 

which provide the comfortable service you enjoy. 

Panama Limited to New Orleans 
Dixie Flyer to Nashville and Florida 
Seminole Limited to Birmingham and Florida 
Daylight Special and Diamond Special to Chicago 

CITY TICKET OFFICE, 324 NORTH BROADWAY 

F. D. Miller, Division Passenger Agent 



Page Three Hundred Forty-one 


Are you reading: the advertisements? 



























■ 


Beauty More Than 


Varnish Deep 


Though it be clad in the beauty of a thousand 
stars, yet if it has not truth it is an abomination. 


A well proportioned body and a sleek surface 
may cover, to the eye, a multitude of sins. 

I he Marmon 34 has the beauty of simplicity; 
the perfect line, the graceful curve, the delicate 
balance, and the poise that power gives. 

Unadorned, undecorated, without frills or fur¬ 
belows, the Marmon 34—exquisite in every detail 
of refinement—is a joy to the beholder. 


But lift the hood and gaze 
into the heart and soul of the 
car—the engine. Here is 
where character is disclosed; 
here are truth and honesty, 
intelligence and experience. 

Examine the bearings, 
consider the oiling system, 
count the grease cups, note 
the rear axle design, chal¬ 
lenge the steering device. 


Weigh it, test it, exam¬ 
ine every detail—the Mar¬ 
mon 34 welcomes micro¬ 


scopic inspection. 

Then ride in it, drive it 
— a quick turn through 
crowded traffic, along stretch 
through open country. 

Beauty is truth, truth 
beauty. In this belief the 
Marmon 34 is built. 


MORE AUTOMOBILE CO. 


3005-7 Locust Street 


ST. LOUIS, MO. 


When you think of buying:, think of the Hatchet advertisers. 

Page Three Hundred Forty-two 

















































Branches: Suite 1100 Marshall Field Annex, Chicago; 1103 Widener Bldg., Philadelphia; 401 Mono¬ 
lith Bldg., 45 West 34th St„ New York; J. J. Crimmings Co., 136 Boylston St.. Boston, Mass., General 
Sales and Distributing Agency for New England. 


THE HARVARD COMPANY 

CANTON, OHIO 


HARVARD PEERLESS CHAIR 

Brought to the Dental Profession as The Harvard Company's 
highest accomplishment in giving to a Chair artistic effects, 
convenience to operator and comfort to patient. The only 
Chair awarded Gold Medal at the Panama Exposition, 
also the Chair adopted by the United States and For¬ 
eign Governments. 

Harvard Cabinets are particular¬ 
ly attractive to those desiring 
Dental Furniture of solid, mas¬ 
sive effects, rich design 
and proportions so per¬ 
fect that they shall 
be beautiful and con¬ 
venient. 

Don't fail to 
see H a r v ard 
goods demon-* 
s t r a t e d be¬ 
fore purchas¬ 
ing, as we can 
supply you 
with the most 
modern and 
complete line 
manufactu red 
in the world. 
Write for a 
catalog. 




OCTOBER 

25 Freshmen handle Cleveland rudely in 

football game—41-0. 

26 Sophomores adopt new fight rules. 

Rough old things! 

28 Pikers pick on Rolla Miners, 7-6. 

30 Clais pledges sixteen Freshmen, all 

girls. 

31 Webster High beats Freshmen, 6-0. 
NOVEMBER 

1 Freshmen have two-bit dance at 

Gymie. 

2 Kelly wins cross-country run. 

3 “Rooter’s Special’’ leaves for Michi¬ 

gan. Bill Martin starts “fussing’’ 
Virginia Dare. Pi Phi’s have state¬ 
room party. - 


Do you insure? See Jos. A. Bernard, Pierce Bldg. 


Page Three Hundred Forty-three 




































et us Kelp })ou 

in arranging the 
equipment, furnishings 
and decorations of $our 
nev? offices, a service 
\0hich fJe are rendering 
the profession without 
cost or obligation. 

Our experience in this 
\Cork vJill enable us to be 
of assistance to j)ou in 
solving these problems, bjl 
drafting detailed plans 
and offering suggestions 
to fit $our particular case. 
4 ‘Pift>>-fi-C>e Modern 
Dental Office Plans” 
our book, explaining this 
service in detail, together 
vJith interesting catalogs 
of Columbia Dental 
Equipment, vJill be sent 
xOith our compliments 
upon receipt of request 
and dealer’s name. 

THE RITTER 
DENTAL MFG. CO. 

Rochester, N. Y. 

Netf York Chicago 

Philadelphia 




Do you wish profitable employment? 


Page Three Hundred. Forty-foil 























































































































We only handle Highest Quality of Dental Goods 

Thau and Nolde Dental Supplies 

FRISCO BLDG. ST. LOUIS 

WE SELL EVERYTHING A DENTIST USES 


THILENIUS 

ca, 

SUMMERSBY 

DENTAL L 

A 

BORATORY 

The Best Dentists and Most Successful Men in the Profession, in St. Louis 
and the surrounding territory are our Regular Customers. They Know. 

Olive 808 

Cent. 1511 


BENOIST BUILDING 
SAINT LOUIS 


YOU CAN ALWAYS DEPEND ON 
“The Old Reliable’’ 


St. Louis Dental 
• 

(Hettinger Bros.) 

Tenth and Olive Streets 
ST. LOUIS, MO. 


The Largest and Most Complete 
Dental Depot in St. Louis 




NOVEMBER 

4 Pikers score on Michigan. Buddy 
Kling carries it over. Boys attend 
temperance lecture. Byrd and J. 
Walker, Esq., try ten-cent store. 
Train half-day late on return trip. 
11 :00 o’clock breakfast in Decatur. 
6 Students play soldier in San Carlos 
Opera. 

8 Student Life meeting—Nagel wins 

lettuce-eating contest. 

9 Pleiades members invade the campus. 

Five “woman athletes” chosen. 

10 Lock and Chain. “Undressed Jewels” 

appear. 

11 Lucky break gives Knox tie, 7-7. 


Page Three Hundred Forty-five 


Read the advertisement on page 329. 





















The Board of Education 
Chose This Milk— 


Hearing in mind the health of the hundreds of pupils who 
eat daily in the St. Louis High Schools lunch rooms, the 
Board of Education selected 

Union Dairy Milk 

exclusively for their use, because of its richness, purity and 
freshness. 


Visit the Farm 

at Pacific, Mo.—it is typical of the many farms where 
Union Dairy Milk is produced. Situated among the pic¬ 
turesque hills and rich valleys of the Meramec, pure, 
healthful milk is produced here under ideal conditions. 
The most searching laboratory tests prove the purity of 
Union Dairy Milk and Cream. 


A Telephone Call 

will start Union Dair> 
Company service at yout 
home. Wagons every¬ 
where—in charge of in¬ 
telligent and courteom 
salesmen. 


UNION DAIRY CO. 


JEFFERSON AND WASHINGTON AVENUES 

BOTH PHONES 




NOVEMBER 

13 Table race introduced to fraternity 

Freshmen. 

14 Architects submit to “Taussigian” 

music at smoker. 

15 McMillan Dormites give dance for 

Tower and Ligget roomers. Phil 
Bryan acts as Master of Cere¬ 
monies. 

16 S. O. S. for Pied Piper sent out from 

McMillan. Not rats, gracious no. 
Mice! 

17 Sophs have cider party in Gymmie. 

23 Rae Metcalfe .entertains McMillanites 

at informal party. Thyrsus presents 
“Arms and the Man.” 


















Announcements of interest are to be found throughout these pages. 

Paye Three Hundred Forty-six K 

























MADE IN SAINT LOUIS 



ENCOURAGE HOME PRODUCTION 
BUT SAINT LOUIS MADE GOODS 


Vacation Perfecto 

The Shirt E'or Sportsmen 

Perfect Fitting, Comfortable, Cool 

Made in a wide range of materials in both 
mercerized and cotton fabrics in an extensive 
variety of exclusive patterns and weaves. Tailored to fit 
with ease and set in proper position. 

The patented tab permits the collar to be worn in two positions; 
namely, comfortable roll sport vacation collar or form-fitting military 
style. This patented tab, which is exclusive with the Vacation Perfecto Shirts, permits 
instant adjustment and insures perfect fit in both positions. 

SOLD BY PROGRESSIVE 
DEALERS EVERYWHERE 


“ DRINK 

OLD JUDGE COFFEE 

Ask Your Grocer 

It Brightens the Intellect and Is So Good 

Meyer Bros. Coffee and Spice Company 


Tou ate sure to miss something—it you do not read all the ads. 
Page Three Hundred Forty-seven 
































f/wAnwwwj-Sh*.. *,•; >r.vrf/n</NMM 


Made in St. Louis. 



For Logging Efficiency 


Logging economy does not depend upon the 
first cost of the equipment used, but it is the 
result of using equipment that will handle 
the greatest amount of lumber in propor¬ 
tion to its cost. 


1 HERCyUES QWIREROPE ( 

Color*<j\/^^/Strena Wir* 


is economical because of its unusual dura¬ 
bility. Modern methods and means of 
manufacture, plus material correctly com¬ 
bining strength, toughness, elasticity and 
flexibility, account for the safe and efficient 
service always afforded by HERCULES 
(Red-Strand) Wire Rope. 

HERCULES Wire Rope is made with 
one red strand, which is our guarantee of 
quality. It is the original colored strand 
wire rope. 


Established 1857. 


A. Leschen & Sons 
Rope Company 




America’s Most Successful Shoe 
for the Younger Generation. 

McElroy-Sloan Shoe Co. 

ST. LOUIS, MO. 


Geo. Kilgen & Son 

Pipe Organ Builders 

3820-3825 Laclede Avenue 
ST. LOUIS, MO. 



Builders of 
Organs — 

Graham Chapel, 
Washington Uni¬ 
versity. Over 200 
in St. Louis 
churches, and 
2,000 in all parts 
of the U. S. 


WRITE FOR CATALOG 


kind of insurance. Pierce Bldg-. 

Page Three Hundred Forty-eighti 
















































Made in St. Louis. 


Capitalize Tour Education! 

Why not capitalize your education? How much is it worth? 
How much has it cost? 

The only way that you may be certain that its value will 
not be lost to your family is by covering it with Life Insurance. 


A potential estate is immediately created for you upon the 
payment of the first premium on your policy. 

The only way you can be sure to leave more than you are 
to-day possessed of, is through Life Insurance. 

Will there be a break, between now and the time you be¬ 
come financially independent? Possibly the welfare of a family 
may be involved. Life Insurance will help you bridge the 
gap. It is your best friend in time of need. 


SERVICE TO POLICY HOLDERS 

is the basic reason for the substantial annual gains of the MIS¬ 
SOURI STATE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. Your 
interest will be served by placing your next policy with it. 

See a Missouri State Life Agent to-day. 

" MADE IN ST. LOUIS'' 



Subscription ticket No. 633 is good for one 191S Hatchet. 


Page Three Hundred forty-nine 




























UNIVERSAL SUPPLY COMPANY 

606 OLIVE STREET 
Headquarters for 

ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES HARDWARE SPORTING GOODS 

SHAVING and AUTO ACCESSORIES 


VICTORIA THEATRE 

THE BEAUTIFUL OPEN LOOKING HOUSE 

DELMAR, NEAR GRAND 

Used for over 75 per cent of all College Productions during the past three years. 

Phone Management for Open Dates. 

Lindell 4485 W. C. MARKHAM, Manager. Delmar 1432 

Res. Phone, Lindell 5451 



Large Number of Designs in Stock. Estimates 
and Designs Furnished on Application 

WINKLE TERRA 
COTTA COMPANY 

MANUFACTURERS OF 

Architectural Terra Cotta 

All Colors 

Office, 502-503 Century Building, 

ST. LOUIS, MO. 

Works, Cheltenham, Mo. 


Page Three Hundred Fifty 


- A* Vi'lVr 


































Designers for Men’s and 


Ladies’ Garments 


Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling 


Also Done 


There is an Expression of Fitness 
and Propriety in Our Tailoring 


WE PLEASE 

Waisman the Tailor 


4478 Delmar Blvd. 


Forest 1967 


NOVEMBER 

24 Glee Club men sing for their feed at 
Sons of Colonial War Banquet. 
Forced to sing three extra songs 
after the “Sons” watched McSorley 



eat. 

26 Glee Club admits seventeen men, all 


singers. 

27 Engineers display giant Washington 
banner, also considerable pep. You 
gotta hand it to ’em. 


28 Eve of the game. Automobile parade. 

Big mass-meeting at the Gym. 


Shirt-tail parade encounters oppo¬ 
sition from City Police force. No 
St. Louis money in sight. 


29 Junior dance for the Prom, benefit. 
Makes “the Lock and Chain look 
sick.” 


Central 1960 


Olive 4090 


VALLE REYBURN 


Manager Automobile Insurance Dept. 


dy411 Kinds of Automobile Insurance 


United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co 


Stephen A. Martin (’07 Law), Resident Pice-President. 


GROUND FLOOR, PIERCE BLDG., 


108 N. FOURTH ST. 


You help the Hatchet most hy patronizing- its advertisers. 


Page Three Hundred Fifty-one 











































BELL, MAIN 5113 KINLOCH, CENTRAL 94 

Newman-Schneck-Powers-Joyce 

TAILORING COMPANY 

1009 OLIVE STREET SAINT LOUIS 


KRIKOR NAHIGIAN & COMPANY 

4260 OLIVE STREET 

THE MOST COMPLETE ORIENTAL STORE IN THE CITY 

Chinese Gold Medallions, Blue Canton 

Dishes, Japanese Kimonos, Slippers, and 
Lindell 6060 Art Goods at very reasonable prices. 


Everything Electrical 

Vacuum Cleaners Fans Supplies 

Frank Adam Electric Co. 

(Established 1S70) 

904-6-14 PINE STREET 


Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by AV. Schiller & Co. 

Page Three Hundred, Fifty-two 
















. . 




IF YOU WANT TO USE THE BEST: ASK FOR 
American Lady Canned Goods and Groceries 

HAAS-LIEBER GROCERY COMPANY 

DISTRIBUTORS 



NOVEMBER 

30 Pikers justify Billikin fears, 9-0, at 
Thanksgiving game. Venable makes 
debut at cheer leader and exponent 
of aesthetic motion. Sig. Chi’s give 
theater party. 

DECEMBER 

1 Student Council gives out new fight 

rules. 

2 Five hundred attend Delta Gamma 

tea. 

4 Schwartzenbach makes “13.” At-a- 

boy. Pi Phi pledges give dance at 
Washington Hotel. 

Freshmen football team beats Sophs, 
6-0. All-varsitv hack field defeated. 



Made to Order 


The searching Eye of the Man Who Knows should 
see Faultlessness in your clothes. 

There is always a certain inconspicuous smartness 
about Nicoll tailoring which gives you that com¬ 
fortable feeling that what you have on is “right.’ 

Prices $25, $30, $35 and upward. 

Nicoll The Tailor, Inc. 

WM. JERREMS SONS 

717 OLIVE STREET. 



Do you insure See Jos. A. Bernard, Pierce Bldg. 
Page Three Hundred Fifty-three 




























Bell, Lindell 188 Kinloch, Central 5348 

DORMITES AND McMILLANITES 

We can Pack and Ship your Furniture at Very Reasonable Rates. 

THE J. BROWN STORAGE COMPANY 

MOVING PACKING SHIPPING PIANO MOVING 


Our Men are Temperate, Careful and Courteous 


SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI 
3446-48 LIN DELL AVENUE 




/ A 





toSSS) 

DEC. ia. 


12 


13 


15 



A® 


18 


19 



DECEMBER., 22 



DECEMBER 

7 Interclass basket-ball begins. Juniors 

defeat Frosh. Sophomores best 
Juniors. 

8 Lock and Chain. 

11 Tan Upsilon gives dance at Midland 
Valley. 

Senior Party. Helen McCargo and 
Adolf Drey win “Spelling Bee.” 
Cozzens, Preston, Jackson and 
Brooks give string-quartette ex¬ 
hibition. Bode mutilates the piano. 
Staid Seniors play drop the hand¬ 
kerchief. 

Freshmen Prom. Toy balloons and 
elaborate programs the specialties. 
Who forgot the programs, anyway? 
Freshmen and Sophomores veto the 
Class Fight. 

Juniors and Seniors nearly come to 
blows in argument over the fight 
question. 

Student Council rules that under¬ 
classes must light, pride or no 
pride. Twenty-five Sophomores 
agree to defend a flag regardless 
of whether or not it is attacked. 
Freshmen meeting breaks up over 
fight question. 

Pacifists walk out and fire-eaters 
carry the day. 

22 Christmas vacation begins. 

23 Class Fight. 

JANUARY 

C. A. C. wins from Varsity basket¬ 
ball team. 

Acting-Chancellor Hall becomes 
Chancellor on resignation of for¬ 
mer Chancellor Houston. 

Big Bill Edmunds resigns position 
as Gridiron Coach and Chief of 
Physical Training Staff. 

Lock and Chain — outsiders in the 
majority. 

Ed Thomas treated to surprise party 
on twenty-first birthday. Big help 
to the family when he grows up. 
Union meeting. Union offers rooms 
for use of University organizations. 
Rearrangement of mail box and mir¬ 
ror in the Girls’ Room ends Co-ed 
difficulties. 


20 


1 


10 


,1 i are announced in some of the advertisements. 

Page Three Hundred Fifty-four 










































Good Furniture 

For the Men’s Dormitories 


$ 50:22 


WILL BUY 


8 Pieces! 


LLT U5 
S H OW 
THEM 
TO YOU 


The Hatchet ticket you bought may be good for one of them 
Page Three Hundred Fifty-five 



Chiffonier, with Mirror — 5 Drawers 

All Steel Bed, 3 feet width 

Cotton Top Mattress 

Library Table, 48-inch Top 

Arm Chair 

Visitors’ Chair 

Book Case 


815-17-19-21 Washington Avenue 




























Giovanni Sperandeo 

(The Young Italian Tenor) 

Student in the Department of Arts and 
Sciences, Washington University* 

Has had considerable experience in 
singing at 

CHURCHES, CONCERTS and 
CHURCH ENTERTAINMENTS 

Alton Press — “Signor Sperandeo has a 
sweet and charming voice and has won 
many admirers.” 

Edwardsville Intelligencer — “Signor 
Sperandeo has a wonderful lyric tenor 
voice.” 

Eo arrange an engagement, see 

WM. J. HALL 

VOCAL INSTRUCTOR 

Suite 39 Musical Arts Bldg. 

BOYLE and OLIVE 


RUEBEL-BROWN, Inc. 

Advertising Agency 

Devoted to “Constructive Advertising”—that 
kind of exploitation which builds business for 
the client and holds his account by the golden 
chain of his own best interests. 


If you think of starting an advertising cam¬ 
paign, or if you are not getting satisfactory 
results with your present advertising, call and 
talk it over with us. 

D. A. R U E B E L, President 
Suite 228-229-230 Boatmen's Bank Bldg., 
St. Louis, Mo. 


FOR GOOD CLOTHES 
See 

FERD WARNER’S 

FIT-U-RITE 

TAILORS 


703 PINE 


Olive 4274 
Cent. 1677 


Do you stay in Ligrgett or Tower Dormitory? 


Page Three Hundred Fifty-six 


V.V>|. y.-i. ... 














Completeness Counts— 

Y OU can center all your Financial, Invest¬ 
ment, Real Estate and Trust business in 
capable hands by using the Mississippi 
Valley Trust Company. Besides all the regular 
services that you have learned to expect from 
trust companies you will find us able to offer 
you special safeguards and special facilities. 



Mississippi Valley Trust 

Capital, Surplus and Profits over $8,000,000 

FOURTH and PINE 


Co. 





JANUARY 

12 Varsity takes revenge on C. A. C., 

27-23. 

13 Glee Club returns from five-day 

cruise with big stories of social 
conquests in the Provinces. (See 
Syl Horn for details.) 

Dan Bartlett reported married. 

15 Frosh take basket victory from Sol- 

dan five. 

16 M. A. C. wins from Union basket¬ 

ball team. 

17 Glee Club concert at the Victoria. 
1S-19 Tigers take two conference games 

from the Varsity. 

20 Engineers have big “freeze-out” 

game in Cupples II. 

21 Washington endowed with $100,000 

fund for benefit of women students. 

22 Gene Lund “resigns” as football mas¬ 

cot. 

23 John Sharon wins Eliot short-story 

prize. 

24 Johnnie Moll reigns as Queen in St. 

Fatima celebration. 

Faculty votes to accept Military 
Training as substituted credit for 
Physical Training. 

25 Final Exams, begin. 

Dorothy Hackman writes first exam., 
then loses blue book. 

27 Craig Kennedy takes charge of “blue 
book mystery,” which baffles efforts 
of Detective Nagel. 

30 “Edmunds, Fricke & Co.” win basket 
contest from Wagner Electrics. 


The ad on page 355 will interest you. 




Page Three Hundred Fifty-seven 







































Kin., Central 10 

MISSOURI TENT AND AWNING CO. 

Established 1873 D. JANNOPOULO, PRES. Incorporated 1884 

206-212 CHESTNUT STREET 

Sole Manufacturers for 

CARPENTER PATENT SPRING ROLLER SHADE 

This awning is without doubt 
the neatest and best thing in 
the window awning line ever 
invented. It is operated with 
one cord only, is easier to put 
up than any other awning and 
cannot get out of order. When 
open for use it is a decided 
ornament, and when closed is 
on a line with the sash in the 
center of the window and can 
be scarcely noticed from the 
street. 

CANVAS GOODS 

OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AND 

CAMPING EQUIPMENTS. 

For Rent, Sidewalk Canopies, 

Carpet Covers and Tents. 

Decorations Done on Short 
Notice. 






Awning Closed. 


FEBRUARY 

2-3 Varsity takes douhlehcader from 
Rolla. 

2 Pre-medics banquet at Melsheimcr’s. 

4 Tom Davis wins handball champion¬ 

ship medal. 

5 Union bonfire and celebration. Sophs 

win interclass contests. 

6 Second Semester opens. Faculty re¬ 

ports high death rate in mid-year 
examinations. 

Varsity wins in first encounter of 
basket-ball series with Billikens, 
33-20. 

7 Montague Lyon elected Managing 

Editor of Student Life to fill va¬ 
cancy left by resignation of former 
incumbent. Brooke Thompson re¬ 
signs position as Business Manager. 
Judge Kcysor admits acceptance of 
bribe in connection with his de¬ 
cision that naughty lawyers must 
not throw candy wrappers on the 
floor. 

Women's Union elects President. 

8 Varsity departs on disastrous in¬ 

vasion of Conference territory. 
Loses two games to Kansas 
Aggies. 

9 Frosh basket-ball team beats Cleve¬ 

land High. (We gotta have a few 
victories scattered thru here,) 

Lock and Chain dance well attended 
by University students. 

Pi Mu Alpha organized. 


Are you reading the advertisements? 


Page Three Hundred Fifty-eight 






















































Hours: Phone: 

7:30 a. m. to S:30 p. m. Cab. 2687 

Sat., 11 p. m. 


AHRENS BARBER SHOP 

5906 Delmar 
Your Patronage Solicited 

Our Motto: 
First-class Work 

Children’s Hair Cutting with 

One of Our Specialties. First-class Service. 



Bell Phone, Importer of 

Forest 1097 Special Models 

D. L. COHN 

Ladies’ Tailor and Gown Maker 

Noil' Located at 

4485 OLIVE ST. SAINT LOUIS 


Subscription ticket No. 312 is good for one 1018 Hatchet. 

Page Three Hundred Fifty-nine 







































... 


Dormitory Students, Your Shoes Will be 
Kept in Good Order by 


Bell: Lixuell 377: Ljndeli. 772; Lixdell 907 
Kin loch : Delmar 1808 

Delmar Shoe Repair Co. 

6208 Delmar Boulevard 


Dorr & Zeller Catering Co* 

IV ED DINGS AND PARTIES 
Supplied on Short Notice 

First Class Work While You Wait 
Prices Very Reasonable 


3924 WASHINGTON BLVD. 

SAINT LOUIS 




WHEN IN NEED OF 

GLASSES OR KODAKS 


ASK FOR DAISY DAILY 

CALL ON THE 

Fisher Optical Co. 


It’s Daisy Bread 

2 Stores 

801 Locust 510 N. Grand 


You get it the day 
it is baked. 

Kodak Films Developed and Printed 

Eyes Tested Free 


A L W AYS FRESH 




GRIMM’S 

COSTUMES and WIGS 


GUERDAN’S 

TWO STORES 

Select COSTUMES for Ladies and Gen¬ 
tlemen Rented for Masquerades, Plays, 
Entertainments, Minstrel Shows, Operas, 
Musical Comedies, etc. We make a Spe¬ 
cialty of Circus and Street Parades. 

ESTIMATES GIVEN 


914 OLIVE STREET 
BROADWAY near WALNUT 

WE HAT YOU RIGHT 
$2—T O STETSON’S FINEST 


NEUSTADT AUTOMOBILE & SUPPLY CO. 

“The Growing House " 

EVERYTHING FOR 

THE AUTOMOBILE 

Jobbers of Automobile Parts and Supplies 

3200-2-4 LOCUST STREET 


Page Three Hundred Sixty 


ifcWOBV 


























FEBRUARY,! 5 — 1 


FEBRUARY 

12 Thyrsus Annual tryouts. Alice 

Johann chosen to play lead in “The 
Truth.” 

12-13 Jayhawkers take two games from 
Varsity. 

14 Seniors make first appearance in 

Caps and Gowns. 

Lieutenant E. Humphrey Price daz¬ 
zles Little Theater patrons by- 
appearance in gold braid and full 
regimentals. 

15 Noble Order of Doc Shannon ap¬ 

pears as new secret society' among 
Glee Club men. 

Art School dance, features costumes 
of 1860. 


FEBRUARY 

16 Flowers forbidden at Junior Prom. 

Arctic atmosphere predominates in 
decorations. 

20 Varsity wins second game from St. 
Louis, also cit\ r collegiate title. 

22 Theta’s entertain with annual Colo¬ 

nial Tea. 

23 Pikers win from Kansas, 23-16. 

Tau Upsilon becomes Gamma Phi 

Beta. 

24 Kansas comes back in second game 

of basket-ball series, 29-19. 

26 Retaliatory strike declared on Com¬ 
mons when Colonel Boorstein tries 
to establish embargo on food sup¬ 
plies. 

28 Washington Militiamen assume air of 

importance as German crisis be¬ 
comes acute. 

MARCH 

1 Annual co-edition of Student Life 

appears. Women members of staff 
find what real work is like. 

2 Kansas Aggies, 42; Washington, 21. 

3 Pikers give Aggies scare but lose, 33 

to 20. 

5 Thyrsus offers prize for “movie 

scenario.” Shades of Dean. 

8 Washington and Missouri put on 

great game: Pikers on short end, 
23 to 19. To much Williams. 



Jos. A. Bernard Co. Every kind of insurance. Pierce Bldg. 
Page Three Hundred Sixty-one 




























Peerless “Eight” $2090 


I his is the Eight Cylinder Car of Economy, Quality and Endurance. 
This motor will develop 80 H. P., and give you twelve miles to a 
gallon of gasoline. The Peerless Motor Car Co., of Cleveland, 
Ohio, has been manufacturing automobiles since 1902. We have 
been selling automobiles in St. Louis since 1904. 

Buy a Peerless and be assured of satisfaction. 

PARK AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 

5201-07 DELMAR AVENUE 




Paper for this book supplied by Acme Paper Co. 


MARCH 

9 Combination Grteco-Roman wrestling, 
boxing, football and referee wins 
for Missouri, 31 to 22. 

Lock and Chain holds annual ban¬ 
quet. Older men shock this year’s 
crop. 

Architects give big dance. Good 
night. 

Stags run wild among the “dears” at 
Lock and Chain. 

Kamp elected 1917-18 basket-ball 
captain. 

Genus Baseballer makes appearance 
on Francis Field. Sore arms 
a-plenty. 

Everybody has great time at Union 
Masque Ball, especially married 
men. 

hirst track meet of season brings out 
fine prospects, also collection of 
stiff legs. 

Horrors of war reach campus. 200 
men drill for first time on Francis 
Field. Awkward squads galore. 
Annual Glee and Mandolin Club ban¬ 
quet. Horn stars with “Reminis¬ 
cences of Women I Have Met on 
Glee Club Trips.” 

Lock and Chain has patriotic dance 
consisting of flags and American 
music. 

Scandal sheet exposes true character 
of hypocritical individuals and or¬ 
ganizations on the campus. 


13 


16 

19 


21 


23 


24 


26 


27 


30 


31 


Page Three Hundred Sixty-lztio 









































Phones: 

Delmar 728 Forest 7919 Forest 8230 

Imperial Laundry 

C. W. Bright & Bros. 

47th and DELMAR BLVD. 

"Bright” and Clean ST. LOUIS. 


GIVERS OF GRADUATION PRESENTS 

WILL FIND A BEAUTIFUL SELECTION OF 

APPROPRIATE GIFTS 

TO CHOOSE FROM AT 

KORTKAMP 

JEWELRY CO. 

Special Fraternity Jewelry Made to Order 

Next to the 
Busv Bee 


421 NORTH 7th ST. 


Central 2723 Olive 4758 

Walter G. Krause 

202 PIERCE BLDG. 

“Everything in Insurance’ ’ 


■ aC c°- 

c. ^ , 

Launderers 

Neat Laundry Work 



MELSHEIMER’S 

“Best Place to Eat” 

NINTH and WASHINGTON AVE. 

" High-Class E n ter tain ment” 

We Offer Special Inducements to W. U. 
Parties and Banquets. 


Come to Jaccard’s for Your 
Class Pins and Engraving 

aaUf ASHINGTON UNIVERSITY students are 
(Ufcl invited to visit .lACUARD'S ON BROAD¬ 
WAY and see the new styles in Engraving for 
Diplomas, Class Announcements. Invitations, 
Program Cards, Calling Cards, etc. The 
prices are the very lowest. 

Our artists will submit original designs for 
vour Class and Fraternity Pins. Buttons, etc. 
Solid Silver Loving Cups and Trophies made 
to order in our own factory on the premises. 



Caban y 3365 Night No., Cabany 2975 

Morrison Auto I rucks 
Bonded Express Co. 

(Formerly Morrison Express Co.) 

J. A. Morrison, Mgr. 

6139 DELMAR AVENUE 


PEVELY DAIRY CO. 

MILK 

The Best Milk 

Victor 3333 • Grand 4400 

Visit Our Plant 

GRAND and CHOUTEAU 


You help the Hatchet most by patronizing its advertisers. 
Page Three Hundred Sixty-tlirce 
























































j>H ■ ' 


No Matter How Far Away You Are 
We Are Near Enough to YOU 
For Your Flowers 

WINDLER’S FLOWERS 

2300 S. GRAND 

Both Phones. 


HAUSER C& MILLER 

REFINERS 

GOLD PLATE and SOLDERS 
ALLOY 


113 A T . 1 1th St. 


St. Louis, Mo. 



Do you insure? See Jos. A. Bernard, Pierce Bldg. 

Page Three Hundred Sixty-four 


ML 




























Phone, Central 4478 Phone, Main 1161 

Brey’s Art Store Co. 

Pictures and Frames 

See Our Collection of 

Oil Paintings and Water Colors 

Artistic Picture Framing 
Our Specialty 

See also Our Collection of Pottery and Art 
Novelties for Birthday and 
Wedding Presents 

515 Locust Street 

Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by W. Schiller & Co. 

Page Three Hundred Sixty-five 



















CLASSIFYING TOTAL ABSTAINERS 


IN LIFE INSURANCE RECEIVES ENDORSEMENT OF 



National Inter-Church Temperance Federation 


The Federation, through its officiary, commends the system of classifying those totally 
abstaining from the use of alcoholic beverages, which is in operation with the 


Security Mutual 
Life Insurance Company 


B1NGHA M TON, N . Y . 


The recent investigations of the Federation have disclosed only two old line legal 
reserve companies in North America, one in the United States and one in Canada, 
which at present maintain a separate classification for abstainers. 

1 he Security Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Binghamton, N. Y., is the only- 
old United States legal reserve or old line company classifying abstainers. 


The Perfection Endowment Policy having all the benefits of any endowment policy 
at practically the cost of an Ordinary Life Policy is the ideal one for a young man, 
and can be taken out only in this company. 

Any information desired will be promptly furnished on application to 


EDWARD CLOSS, 

Manager for Eastern Missouri, 

Suite 313-314 Central Nat i. Bank Bldg. S'F. LOUIS, MO. 


Telephone, 

Bell, Olive 4427. 


JOHNSTON G. CRAIG, University Agent. 


01 


Announcements of interest are to be found throughout these pages. 


Page Three Hundred Sixty- 




























100 Shaves from ONE 
Gillette Blade! 

—and the last shave as smooth, clean and comfortable as the 
first. Don’t throw away your blades after the first few shaves. 
Strop them in the _ 

' Twinplex Stropper 

It will put a keen edge on your dull blades. It makes Gillette 
Shaving a real luxury and pays for itself in less than a year 
in the saving of blades. It’s handsomely made, simple to oper¬ 
ate, fits comfortably in your hand, is dependable and makes an 
acceptable and appreciable gift. 

30 days’ FREE trial 

If you are not absolutely satisfied with it after 30 days’ trial, 
return it and your dealer will return your money. It is guar¬ 
anteed to last and give perfect service for 10 years. Descrip¬ 
tive booklet free. 

WHO’S GOT TICKET No. 876? 

That’s the winning number. He’s a lucky man, because, if he 
has a Gillette he’s going to have shaving comfort he never 
knew before—and save money in blades. 

Twinplex Sales Co. 1602 Locust St. St. Louis, Mo. 


You are bound to miss something—if you don’t read all the ads. 
Three Hundred Sixty-seven 

















The Aetna Life Insurance 

Company 


Hartford Conn. 

Over 67 Years in Business 

Assets Over 130 Million Dollars 

We issue the most liberal policies— 

Life, Accident and Health. 

We pay DOUBLE on life policies, in case of death by 
accident. 

Disability Clause requires no extra premium and con¬ 
tinues through life. 

Live wires can make enough money to pay their expenses 
through college, or will make good vocation for life. 

Full instructions and assistance to beginners, gladly fur¬ 
nished. 


Address 

705 Olive St. Louis 


Prizes are announced in some of the advertisements. 

Page Three Hundred Sixty-eight 




















UNIVERSITY SPIRIT 


1 X 7ITH every contemplated purchase should go the thought, “Can 1 
’ * just as easily get it from a firm which advertises in a University 
publication as from one which does not?” With but one or two excep¬ 
tions every regular advertiser at the University is found in the Hatchet. 
Consequently you need only consult the Alhpabetical List of Adver¬ 
tisers on the bulletin boards, in the Hatchet, or in the Fralma Guide 
Book, to find out whether a certain company advertises at Washington. 
If it does not, look in the Classified Index to be found at the same places 
for a company in a similar business which dors advertise. '1 o favor 
the latter, making known your reason for so doing, is as much a matter 
of University spirit as the performance of any other act tending for the 
general good of Washington. Spread the idea among your friends. 


AMERICAN HOTEL 
and ANNEX 

ST. LOUIS’ MOST 

POPULAR HOTELS 

Three direct car lines from 
Union Station, ten minutes 
ride. European plan ; every 
room has a private hath and 
circulating ice water. 

Rates, $1.50 a Day and Up 

Rooms for Conventions and Banquets. 
We also do outside catering. 



The Hatchet ticket you bought may be good for one of them. 


Page Three Hundred Sixty-nine 

















RETURN THE FAVOR 


T HE entire Hatchet Board wishes to call your 
attention to the fact that the firms which ad¬ 
vertise in this book deserve your patronage. You 
can decide for yourself how much they deserve it 
by considering the fact that the book could not 
possibly have been sold for less than $4.00—with¬ 
out the income from advertising. Between trad¬ 
ing at one or another of two first-class firms, there 


is seldom any reason for not trading with the one 
which advertises in the Hatchet. To find out 
which firms advertise at Washington it is only 
necessary to look in the Classified List of Adver¬ 
tisers on the bulletin boards or in the Pralma 
Guide Book. Show your university spirit by 
making use of these lists whenever you are think¬ 
ing of making a purchase of any kind. 


BITTEL-LEFTWICH 

LINDELL AT GRAND 

Lindell 5700 branches: Central 5747 

3000 NORTH GRAND KINGSHIGHWAY, South of Delmar 

3211 SOUTH GRAND WEBSTER GROVES, at Gore and Lockwood 

LEE PUNCTURE PROOF and REGULAR TIRES 

KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRES ACCESSORIES 

Originators of Free Road Sendee 


FRONT RANK 

Steel Furnaces 



Service 


Quality 


It is gas tight and soot proof 


A combination heating and ventilating 
system. 

For homes, fraternity houses, schools 
and churches. 

Haynes-Langenberg Mfg. Co. 

4051 Forest Pk. Bl., St. Louis, Mo. 


'Pouring Necessities Goodyear 

Service Station 


Robert Barnicle 


Automobile Accessories 

Goodyear and Goodrich Cord Tires 


Boyle and Olive, 

Lindell 3828 ST. LOUIS 


Subscription ticket No. 917 is good for one 191S Hatchet. 


Page Three Hundred Seventy 







































BILTEU & COMPANY 

INCORPORATED 

INVESTMENT SECURITIES 


Change of occupation is rest. 
Bilyeu & Company offers an 
exceptional opportunity for 
young men to broaden their 
experience in the field of 
modern finance. We need the 
services of bright, energetic 
young men. 

To earn money during, vacation 
see Sales Manager. 


BILYEU CBb COMPANY 

1300-1301-1302 LaSalle Bldg. 

ST. LOUIS, MO. 


Have you been reading 1 the advertisements? 

Page Three Hundred Seventy-one 

















^TO R THE BEST COSTUMES AND WIGS 

SEE 

J. V. MUSICK 

THEATRICAL COSTUMER 
FOR RENT OR MADE TO ORDER 
We Supply Costumes for 

Masquerade Balls, Pageant Plays and All Other Occasions. 

° UVE 410 1216 OLIVE STREET 


LEARN 


LEAHEY’S 

HEATLESS Trouser Press 


SHORTHAND, 

TYPEWRITING 
or BOOKKEEPING 

During the Summer. 

1 lirec Months’ Course in 
Day School or Night School 
—including books — $40.00 

RUBICAM 

BUSINESS SCHOOL 

4933 DELMAR AVENUE 



presses your trousers 
by automatic healless 
method that removes 
baggy knees, smooths 
away wrinkles and 
gives a knife-like 
crease from belt to 
boot. A Prosser, a 
Creascr, a Stretcher 
and a perfect Hanger 
that keep s them 
always protected fro»i 
dirt and moths, com¬ 
bined in one. 

No Operating Ex¬ 
pense — First Cost is 
Last Cost. 

$1.00 pays for press¬ 
ing bills all your life. 
It is the greatest 
money, time and la¬ 
bor saving invention 
tor men since the 
safety razor. 

To get a Trousers 
Press on trial, see 
any member of the 
Hatchet Board. 


When you think of buying-, think of the Hatchet advertisers. 


Page Three Hundred Seventy-two 




































I 

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About the Measure 
of Printing— 


Every piece of printing you 
measures to some standard. 


order 


I 

ti. 


Either up to the standard of quality— 
or down to a standard of “price.” 

And in the production of your printing, 
every hour of time is a cost that you 
pay for—but only every hour of effici¬ 
ently directed work produces a value 
that you get. 

The Britt Standard of Quality at al¬ 
ways the Right Price—is maintained 
by a definite system of getting the 
greatest value in results from every 
hour of time put on each job. 

BRITT 

Printing & Publishing Co. 

Walnut at Ninth ST. LOUIS 

THIS ISSUE OF THE HATCHET IS BRITT-PRINTED 


Paper for this hook supplied by Acme Paper Co. 
Page Three Hundred Seventy-three 


1 

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i 
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ii 

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ii 



















THE HATCHETS 

of TWO INSTITUTIONS OF “QUALITY” 



Washington University, founded on George Washington’s Birthday, 
has sought always to uphold those high standards of excellence which were 
followed by the Father of Our Country. The quality of the Hatchet, the 
Annual published by its students, is an example of the fine work done by 
those who attend such an institution. It is an example by which the 
excellence ot the University itself may be judged. 



Simmons Hardware Company, known throughout the world is an 
institution founded on the principle that Quality comes first. Their trade- 
mark Keen Kutter, has come to stand for—and to mean—Quality. 

I he Keen Kutter Hatchet, an example of the high grade tools sold 
by this company, is made to last a life-time and will be kept just as long as 
is your Washington U. Hatchet. Why not associate, then, 

THE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HATCHET 
THE KEEN KUTTER HATCHET 

-The Recollection of Quality Remains Hong After the Price is Forgotten. 


Trade Mark Reg. in U. S. Pat. Off. E. C. Simmons 


'wmm$ nu 


PHILADELPHIA, PA. 
SIOUX CITY, IA. 
WICHITA, KANS 



Manufacturers and Distributers 
ST. LOUIS, MO. 

U. S. A. 


NEW Y'ORK CITY 
TOLEDO, OHIO 
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 


Jos. A. Bernard Co. Every kind of insurance. Pierce Bldg. 

Page Three Hundred Seventy-fou, 



































Index to Advertisers 


Abel, Oliver, Optician . 359 

Acme Paper Co. 325 

Adam, Frank. Electric Co . 352 

Aetna Life Insurance Co . 368 

Ahren’s Barber Shop.359 

Alban, C. W., Surgical Supplies. .359 

American Hotel, Caterers . 369 

Barniele, Robt., Auto Accessories.370 

Beckman, Arthur, Men’s Furnishings . .359 

Bernard, Joseph, Insurance.327 

Bilyeu <Si Co., investment Securities . 371 

Bittel-Leftwich Tire Co ... 370 

Brey’s Art Store . 365 

Britt Printing & Pub. Co . 373 

Brown, J„ Storage Co . 354 

Carpenter Ice Cream Co . 337 

Carr Bros. Insurance Co . 359 

Carter & Wilson Printing Co .. 359 

C. & E. I. Railroad Co .. 339 

Cicardi's Restaurant .353 

Cohn, Ladies' Tailor . 359 

Collins, H, S., Printing Co . 359 

Conlcling, O. C., Photographer . 338 

Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co . .329 

Corona Typewriter Co . 331 


Cotrell & Leonard, Academic Costumes..334 


Daisy Bread . 360 

Delmar Shoe Repair Co . 360 

Driemeyer Tailoring Co . 330 

Dorr & Zeller Catering Co . 360 


Fisher Optical Co. . 

Friton, Julius, Jewelry Co . 

General Electric Co .-. 

German Mutual Life Insurance Co. 

Grimm's Theatrical Supply Co . 

Godfrey, James A., Contractor . 

Guerdan's Hat Co ... 

Haas-Lieber Grocery Co . 

Harvard Dental Co. . 

Haynes-Langenberger Furnace Mfg 

Hauser & Miller Penning Co.. . 

I-Iorsman. E. I., Tennis Supplies . 

Illinois Central Railroad Co . 

Imperial Laundry Co . 

Kalisch Bros. Floral Co . . 

Kllgen, George, Pipe Organs . 

Ivoken Barber Supply Co . 

Kortkamp Jewelry Co . 

Krause, Walter, Insurance . 

Kuntzmann, Barber . 

Lange, C. A., Laundry Co . 

Leahey’s Trousers Press . 

Leschen Wire Rope Co . 

Loose-Wiles Biscuit Co. 

Lungstras Cleaning & Dyeing Co . 

McElroy-Sloan Shoe Co .— 

Maison Blanche Beauty Shop . 

Made in St. Louis . 


.360 
.375 
.371 
32S 
.360 
.361 
.360 
.353 
.343 
.370 
.36 i 
.334 
.341 
.363 
.340 
..348 
..340 
.363 
.363 
.337 
.363 
..372 
..348 
334 
..340 
.348 
.337 
..347 


Marshall Bros. Livery Co . 32S 

Melsheimer’s Cafe . 363 

Mermod, Jaccard, & King Jewelry Co....363 

Merriam, G. C., Dictionaries.334 

Meyer Bros. Coffee & Spice Co . 317 

Mississippi Valley Trust Co.357 

Missouri State Life . 349 

Missouri Tent & Awning Co.35S 

More Automobile Co.342 

Morrison Auto Trucks . 363 

Mueller, Miss Irene, Stenographer.328 

Musick, J. V., Costumer . 372 

Nahigian, Krikor, & Co., Oriental Store..352 

Xeustadt Auto Supply Co . 360 

Newman. Schneck, Powers, Joyce_352 

Nicoll. The Tailor . 353 

Ohio Electric Automobile Co. 328 

Park Automobile Co . 362 

Perfecto Shirts . 347 

Pevely Dairy Co.— . 363 

Reyburn, Valle, Auto Insurance . 351 

Ritter Dental Mfg. Co . 344 

Ross' Cafe . 364 

Rubicam Business School.372 

Ruebel-Brown, Inc., Adv. Agency . 356 

St. Louis Dental Co . 345 

Sandperl Clothing Co . 332 

Scarritt-Comstock Furniture Co.355 

Scheller Catering Co . 364 

Schmidt, Robt., Costumer.364 

Schiller, W., & Co., Photo Supplies . 329 

Schwarz & Masters, Caterers . 340 

Schwerdtmann's Pharmacy. . 337 

Security Mutual Life Ins. Co.366 

Simmons Hardware Co . 374 

Solomon, R. C., Pathfinder Cars . 37S 

Spalding Stationery Co . 364 

Sperandeo, Giovanni. Tenor . 356 

Sport Shop . 364 

Streekfus Steamboat Co . 326 

Thau & Nolde Dental Co . 345 

Thilenius & Summersly Dental Co . 345 

Twinplex Sales Co . 367 

Union Dairy Co . 346 

Universal Supply Co . 350 

Victoria Theatre . 350 

Wabash Railroad . 333 

Waisman, A., Tailor . 351 

Warner, Ferd, Tailor . 356 

Washington Pharmacy . 336 

Washington University . 376 

Weber, F. H„ Florist . 327 

Western Optical Co . 350 

Westminster Laundry Co . 325 

Whiting, Sid. Photographer . 364 

Windier, Florist . 364 

Winkle Terra Cotta Co . 350 

Young Bros., Floral Co . 335 


Julius Friton, Pres. Albert G. Rubin, Vice-Pres. Ernest T. Friton, Sec. 

Established 1859 

JULIUS FRITON jewelry and gem co. 

St. Louis’’ Most Exclusive Jewelry Shop 

FINE PEARLS A SP E C 1 A LT Y 
Awarded Gold Medal at the San Francisco World’s Fair 
De Menil Building Telephone, Bell, Olive 49 121 N. Seventh St. 

SAINT LOUIS 

Classified List of Advertisers on page 377. 


Page Three Hundred Seventy-five 







































































































































Prepare for Success 


by taking a course of training in 

this institution. No matter what line of 
work you expect to follow, we can train you to excel, 
for the broad foundation laid in our college can be 
supplemented, at will, by special work in our various 
schools. 

THE COLLEGE provides the standard, Classical, University 
course, leading to the A. B. degree. This is the best foundation 

upon which to build a special course in any of the following schools. 

G. O. James, Ph. D., Dean. 


ENGINEERING or ARCHITECTURE 

is taught in the most modern and thorough 
fashion in our schools devoted to these 
subjects. A. S. Langsdorf, Dean. 

MEDICINE as taught in Washington Uni¬ 
versity Medical School is abreast of the 
hest medical practice of the age. Phillip 
Shaffer, Pli.D., Dean. 

LAW, as taught in Washington University 
Law School, fits the graduate for practice 
and equips him with thorough knowledge 
of the principles of the profession. Richard 
L. C.oodc, A.M., LL.D., Dean. 


SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS— Here careful 
training is given in the principles of Art, 
and students of artistic talent are put in 
the way of achieving fame and fortune. 
Edmund H. Wuerpel, Director. 

DENTAL ' SCHOOL, J. H. Kennedy, 
M.D., D.D.S., Dean, fits its students for 
the profitable practice of Dentistry. 

HENRY SHAW SCHOOL OF BOTANY 

is not excelled by any similar institution in 
America in the practical training it affords 
its students. George T. Moore, Pli.D.. 
Director. 


Parents interested in the success of their sons and daughters, 
and young men and women interested in their own success 
should write to G. W. Lamke, Registrar, Room 200 University 
Hall. 

Washington University^ 

Saint Louis, Mo. 


Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by AY. Schiller & Co. 


Page Three Hundred Seventy-six 










Classified List of Hatchet Advertisers 

Whenever you purchase an article of any kind, be sure that it is from a firm 
that is to be found in the following list. In this way you will not only be sure of 
getting a reliable product, but you will assist in giving the advertisers—our best 
friends—the patronage they rightly deserve. 


Art. 

Brey’s Art Store, 515 Olive. 


A utomobiles. 

More Automobile Co.. 3005 Locust. 

Ohio Electric Sales Co., 5113 Delmar. 
Peerless-Park, 5201-07 Delmar. 

Solomon. R. C\, 3128 Locust. 

Automobile Tires A: Accessories. 
Bittel-Leftwich, Lindell and Grand. 
Xeustadt, 3200 Locust. 

Banks. 

Mississippi Valley Trust Co., 

Fourth and Pine. 

Barbers. 

Ahrens, 5006 Delmar. 

Kuntzmann, 6192 Delmar. 

Beauty .Shops, 

Maison Blanche, Skinker and Berlin. 

Caterers. 

American Hotel, 7th and Market. 

Dorr & Zeller, 3024 Washington. 

Scheller, 715 Kingshighway. 

Schwarz & Masters, 6005 Kingsbury. 

Costumers. 

Grimms, 14 N. Fourth. 

Robt. Schmidt, 206 S. Fourth. 

Clea tiers. 

Lungstras, Skinker and Berlin. 

Clothing A Furnishings. 

Arthur Beckman. 3702 N. Grand. 

Guerdan’s, 914 Olive. 

Sandperl, 7th and Olive. 

Dairies. 

Union, Jefferson and Washington. 

Dental Supplies. 

Harvard Co., Canton, Ohio. 

Ritter Dental Co., Rochester, N. Y. 

St. Louis Dental Mfg. Co.. 10th and Olive. 
Thau & Nolde, Frisco Bldg. 

Thilenius & Summersby, Benoist Bldg. 

Dormitory Furniture. 

Scarritt-Comstock, 817 Washington. 

Electrical Supplies. 

F. Adam Electric Co., 004 Pine. 

Express. 

Morrison Auto Trucks, 6139 Dal mar. 

Florists. 

Kalisch Bros. 4506 Delmar. 

F. H. Weber, Taylor and Olive. 

Windier, Grand and Shenandoah. 

Young Bros., 5504 Waterman. 

General. 

Carpenter Ice Cream Co., Delicious Ice 
Cream. 

Freund Bros. Bread Co., Daisy Bread. 
Ilaas-Lieber, American Lady Goods. 
Haynes-Langenberger, 

Front Rank Furnaces. 

Leschen Wire Rope Co., Hercules Wire 
Rope. 

Loose-Wiles Biscuit Co., Sunshine Biscuits. 
McElroy-S'loan Shoe Co., Billiken Shoes. 

G. & C. Merriam Co., Webster’s Interna¬ 

tional Dictionary. 

Meyer Bros. Coffee Co., Old Judge Coffee. 
Perfecto Shirts — Made in St. Louis. 
Simmons Hardware Co., Keen Kutter 
Hatchets. 

Twinplex Sales Co., Twinplex Stroppers. 
Washington University, St. Louis. 

Insurance. 

Aetna Life, Central National Bank Bldg. 
Joseph Bernard, General, Pierce Bldg. 
Carr Bros., Gay Bldg. 

Connecticut Mutual, Chemical Bldg. 
German Mutual, 

Third National Bank Bldg. 

Walter Krause, 202 Pierce Bldg. 

Missouri State Life, 15th and Locust. 

Valle Reyburn, Auto, Pierce Bldg. 
Security Mutual, Central Nat. Bank Bldg. 

Advertiser’s i 

Page Three Hundred Seventy-seven 


Jewelry. 

Julius Friton. 121 X. Seventh. 

Kortkamp. 4 21 N. Seventh. 

Mermod, Jacc&rd & King. 

Broadway and Locust. 

Laundries. 

Imperial, 4701 Delmar. 

C. A. Lange, 2010 S. Jefferson. 

Westminster, 4115 Olive. 

Miscellaneous. 

Acme Paper Co., 113 S. 8th St. 

C. W. Alban Surgical Supply Co., 

3563 Olive. 

Cotrell & Leonard, Costumes, Albany, N. Y. 
Jas. A. Godfrey, Contractor, 

Wainwright Bldg. 

Hauser & Miller, Refiners, 113 N. 11th St. 
Geo. Kilgen, Pipe Organs, 3820 Laclede. 
Koken Barber Supply Co., 117 N. Seventh. 
Iv. Nahigian & Co., Oriental Goods, 

4260 Olive. 

Ruebel-Brown, Inc.. Advertising Agency. 

Boatmen’s Bank Bldg. 

Giovanni Speramleo, Italian Tenor, 

Wash ington University. 

Universal Supply Co., 606 Olive. 

Winkle Terra Cotta Co., 502 Century Bldg. 

Moving, Packing, Shipping. 

J. Brown Storage Co., 3446 Lindell. 

Opticians. 

Oliver Abel, Carleton Bldg. 

Fisher, 801 Locust. 

Western, 1002 Olive. 

Pharmacies. 

Schwerdtmann’s, 6600 Delmar. 

Washington, Skinker and Berlin. 

Photographers. 

O. C. Conkling, 3826 Olive. 

Sid Whiting, 520 N. Grand. 

Photo Supplies. 

W. Schiller & Co., 6 S. Broadway. 

Printing. 

Britt Ptg. & Pub. Co., 0th and Walnut. 
Carter & Wilson, Gay Bldg. 

H. S. Collins. 13th and Washington. 
Spalding Stationery Co., 324 Olive. 

Railroads A' Steamboats. 

C. & E. I.. 322 N. Broadway. 

Illinois Central. 321 N. Broadway. 
Streckfus Steamboat Line, 

Foot of Washington. 

Wabash, 309 X. Broadway. 

Restaurants A Cafes. 

Cicardi's, Delmar and Euclid. 

Melsheimer’s, 507 N. Ninth. 

Ross’ Cafe, Delmar and De Baliviere. 

Shoe Repairing. 

Delmar Shoe Repair Co., 

Delmar. near Skinker. 

Lungstras Cleaning Co.. 

Skinker and Berlin. 

Sporting Goods. 

Sport Shop, 204 N. Eighth. 

E. I. Hors man Co., New York City. 

Stenographer. 

Miss Irene Mueller, 

Washington University. 

Tailors. 

D. L. Cohn. Ladies’ Tailor, 4 1S5 Olive. 
Driemeyer, 202 N. Seventh. 

Newman, Schneck, Powers, Joyce, 

1009 Olive. 

Nicoll, 717 Olive. 

Waisman, 4i78 Delmar. 

Ford Warner, 703 Pine. 

Taxicabs. 

Marshall Bros. Livery Co.. 5263 Delmar. 

Ten t s A A wn i o g.s. 

Missouri Tent & Awning Co.. 210 Chestmit. 

Theaters* 

Victoria, 3631 Delmar. 

Typewriters. 

Corona Typewriter Sales Co., 

408 N. Seventh. 


Alphabetical Index on page 375. 
















BOMOXT 306 


CENTRAL 306 


R. C. SOLOMON 

Pathfinder Motor Cars 


HIGH GRADE 


3128 LOCUST STREET 



CALL FOR DEMONSTRATION 
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 


Do you insure? See Jos. A. Bernard, Pierce Bldg. 

Page Three Hundred Sevenly-eight 


. X'XVi'ivifiW.V 





























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I 


Index 




ft or, 27R 


.123 

Advertisements . 

.....218, 219 


.124 

Alpha Kappa Delta . 

.264, 265 


.127 

Alpha Omega Alpha . 

.206, 208 

.. .221, 225 
.141 


.137 

Alumni Association, The. 


.139 

Architectural Society . 

Dents, Pictures of 

.126 


.142 

Deutscher Verein. 

.209 


.143 

Edmunds, Dr. W. P. 

(Football Coach) 

162 


.146 

Arts and Sciences, Department 

of—29, 74 

Eliot Magazine, The. 

.232 


Faculty . 

Senior Class. 
Junior Class 


.33 

.37 

.60 


Sophomore Class .— 64 

Freshman Class. —. 08 

Unclassified . ^ 3 

Art Section. The ... u - ‘ 8 

Artus. 280 ’ 281 

Baslcet-ball . 488 

Picture of Team . 488 

Pictures of Players . 170 

IfiO 

Recofi .-. ' 

Review . 108 

Class—. I 78 - J;? 

Girls’ . 184 - 488 

Beta Rho . 268 ' - 89 

Beta Theta Pi . 252 - 263 

Bonfire. The .-. 394 

Botany, The Shaw School of . 147 

Director . 

Faculty .-. 

Members .-. _ 9 

Statement . 1 j’” 

Bridges, Miss (Ass’t Nurse) Portrait of.108 
Busiek, Captain (Football) . I 7 ’ 3 

Chancellor, The, Portrait of . 27 

Change in Chancellors, The. . .28 

Chapel Hour at Washington . 318 

Chemical Engineers’ Club, The . 222, 223 

Chi Zeta Chi . - 272 ’ 278 

Choir, Tile Chapel . - 04 - - 08 

. 242, 243 

. 312 

. 67 


148 

149 


Clais . 

Class Scrap, Cartoon of .. 

Rules for .-. , 43 

Class Societies . “ 

Collimation Club, The . “- 0 ' 2-1 

Confrerie Alongive, The . 

Corporation, The . 


Dandelion Day. Pictures of. 

Write-up .-.- 

Dedication . 

Delta Gamma. -. 

Delta Sigma Delta . 2 ‘ S " 

Page Three Hundred Seventy-nine 


Engineers at Work, The (Cartoon) . 316 

Engineers’ Council, The .- 215 

Engineering Societies, The . 216, 223 

Faculties. 

Arts and Sciences . 33 

Art School . 143 

Botany .-. 443 

Dental . 428 

Law .—... 77 

Medicine . - . 94 

Nursing and Social Service . 109 

Football . 453 

Picture of the Team . 454 

Pictures of Players . 100, 161 

Views of Games . 486 , 459 

Record . 488 

Review . 482 

Class . 478, 477 

Foreword . 7 

Fraternities . 245, 285 

Honorary . 2S0 ’ 288 

Professional . 266. 279 

Social .-. 24C - 285 

Freshman’s Letter Home . 319 

Freshman Traditions . 72 

Freshmen (Pictures) . 286 

Friecke, G. W. (Basket-ball Coach) 

Portrait of .—. . 

Frontispiece .-... 8 

Gamma Phi Beta . 294, 295 

Glee Club, The . 200 

Goode, Dean R. L. (Law School) 

Portrait of . J 8 

Hatchet Board, The .-. 230, 231 

Hockey. Girls’ . 488 ' 487 

How They Get Them . 320. 321 


214 

10 


.298 

..305 

.8 

292, 293 


Index. 

Advertising. 

Alphabetical .—. 

Classified .—. 

Book .-. 

In Memorlam .. 

James, Dean G. O. (College). 


. 375 

. 377 

.379, 380 


...9 

..30 
















































































































































Jones, Meredith (Manager, Football) 

Portrait of . 359 

Junior Prom, The. 396 , 307 

Junior Prom Committee, The . .63 

Kappa Alpha . 258, 259 

Kappa Alpha Theta . 288, 289 

Kappa Sigma __ 262, 263 

Ivennerly, Dean J. H. (Dental) 

Portrait of ._.... 124 

ICeod (Women's Senior Honorary).240 

Langsdorf, Dean A. S. (Arch, and Eng.) 

Portrait of . 31 

Law School. The . 7 ; 

Doan . 

Faculty . . 

Senior Class . jg 

Middle Class . §5 

Junior Class . . 

L’Envoi . 324 

Les Caseuses . 212 

Lock and Chain, The (Sophomore 

Society) . . 236. 237 

Lowes, Dr. J. L., Portrait of....Ins. bet. 8 , 9 

-Mandolin Club, The. . 200 

Mass Meeting . .310, 311 

May Day . 308, 399 

McMillan Vaudeville ... 305 

Medical S.chool, The . s9 

Dean . . 

Faculty .. 

Senior Class ..... , l:! 

Junior Class ._... 799 

Sophomore Class . 102 

Freshman Class . 104 

Medics (Pictures) ... 333 

Men's Council. The . 139 . 193 

Michigan Trip, The . 333 

Military Training . 322 

Militia . 3.73 

Moore, Prof. G. T. (Botany) Portrait of .148 

National Guard, Washington Members of 

323 

Nurses, School for ._. 337 


Phi Beta Pi.,. ... 270, 271 

Phi Delta Phi. . 266, 267 

Phi Delta Theta ... 248, 249 

Pi Beta Phi . 290, 291 

Pi Mu Alpha .... 296, 297 

Pleiades (Women's Hockey)..241 

Poetry Club, The . 213 

Pralma (Senior Honorary) ... 234 

Pre-Medic Society, The .. 226. 227 

Price, Jessamine (Women's Tennis 

Champion) . 333 

Publications ._... . _22S 232 

Review Section... ..235, 299 

St. Fatima's Day . 334 

Scarab . .>34 

Schulze, An Illustrated Life of. 3141.315 

Secret Societies. . 

Secret Societies. List of. 

Senior Week, Program of.. 

Pictures of ... 

Shaffer. Dean P. A. (Medical) 

Portrait of ._. 99 


.233, 298 

. 233 

. 59 

. 74 


Sharp, Edward (Chairman, Junior Prom) 

63 

Sigma Alpha Epsilon .. 250, 251 

Sigma Chi . . . 254 , 255 

Sigma Nu . 256.' 257 

Stgma Xi ._. 2 83 

Sororities . 287 , 297 

Stewart. Don (Cheer Leader) . . 104 

Stimson, Miss (Head Nurse) Portrait of 

10S 

Student Life . . 22S 929 

Surkuss, The Univee . 392 , 303 


Head Nurses 


.108 


Faculty . 399 

Senior Class . . 

Intermediate Class . _.119 

Junior Class . 393 

Nu Sigma Nu ..... 274, 275 

Obelisk (Freshman Society) . 23S, 239 

Organizations . . 339 232 

Pageant, The Elizabethan. 390 , 301 

Pan-Hellenic Conference, The . 246 

Pan-Hellenic Baseball Series, The.247 

Phi Beta Kappa . 2S2 


Tennis, Women's.... 



Theta Xi . 




Thyrsus . ioj , no 

Thyrsus Annual .... 



Title Page . 



Towers, The (Painting by 
Track . 

Guerin). 5 

Pictures of Track Men 
Record . 



Review. 17 , 

Class .. 



Union, The Washington . 

University, The .... 




Views of the University.. .. 11 , 26 

“W” Men ... . ..... 359 

Women's Athletic Association.. 339 

Women's Council ... 192 193 

Word of Thanks . . ’ 333 

Wuerpel, Prof. E. H. (Art Schooi)”~"'”'l42 
Xi Psi Phi.. 


Page Three Hundred Eighty 












































































































































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In Appreciation 


The “1918 Hatchet” is clone with and as we lean back in our editorial 
chair and take a breath of relief, we remember with sincere gratitude, 
the efforts of students, other than the members of the Board, who have 
cheerfully expended time and labor on the book. \\ e take this oppor¬ 
tunity to thank the following for their efforts to make the book a success. 


Page Three Hundred Eighty-one 



Francis Douglas 

Harold Knight 

Henry Duncker 

Stewart McCormack 

Randolph Lyon 

Ray Leimkuehler 

Hixon Kinsella 

Raymond Herbert 

Herbert IIausman 

Burt Austin 

Ben Schulzf. 

John Dehnert 

Elizabeth Chapin 

Charles Lieber 

Grace Woods 

Leo Abrams 

Dorothy Jackes 

Harry Nueling 

Ida Brossard 

Dorothy Aylesbury 

Emma Stuyvesant 

Urban Busiek 

Lucy McMichael 

Mary Blackburn 

Wycliff Kling 

Elmer Hughes 

John Moll 

Wilson Lewis 

George Maguolo 

Harry Thomas 

Cloyd Gustafson 

Glenn Phelps 

Irene Mueller 

Eugene Adams 

Ben Roberts 

Mitchell Leisen 

Clemens Nicklaus 

Frank Rowan 

Wilbur Adams 

Margaret Martin 

Fritz Grolock 

Ed O’Brien 

Elbert Jacobsmeyer 

Etta Reller 

Al Marquard 

Lillian Stupp 

Harry Shanley 

Clyde Smith 

Robert Mueller 

Ed Thomas 

Duff Allen 

Victor Vaccarezza 

Carl Chalfant 

Helen Miuus 

Max Muench 

Lusby Simpson 

Adolph Hoenny 

Fred Hammond 








































































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